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This isn't studying. This is a translation project. Written by Sybil Fawlty. (based on the Fawlty Towers quote "Name: Sybil Fawlty. Specialist subject: The bleedin' obvious". Apologies if I just lost you...)
Several scholars suggest that inconsistencies between explicated thouts and actions serve to compromise trust.
Translation: People don't like being lied to.
In order for trust to develop and be sustained, the individual's actions must be predictable with an acceptable degree of accuracy.
Translation: If you can't do what you say you will, people won't trust you.
Interpersonal trust is a widely studied element of trust and represents the most common application of trust in daily interactions.
Translation: Some researchers really can make money for stating the obvious.
Technology trust is...based on expectations of technology predictability, reliability and utility and influenced by the individual's predilection to trust technology.
Translation: If people expect computers to work, and they do, they'll trust them.
...technology trust is a uni-directional relationship as the technology is an inanimate object.
...there are no words...
The Follett report was massively influential, changing the shape of libraries in Higher Education across the country. The only copy available online has lots of letters missing. No, not typos, letters missing.
"They should take account of developments in formation technology, in the organisation of teaching and learning, and in ch provision, as well as the organisational arrangements which govern the 's place within the institution."
I don't know what a "ch" is but I'm pretty sure I've never been provided with one, and apparently, the invisible man has a place within the institution...
Somehow, even writing notes in pink pen doesn't make this one better...
Somehow, these two just seemed to go together:
It was Mr Potato Head last night, but this will do!
And then...
<td align="center">
Jadesfire --
[noun]:
A poltergeist sent back in time to change the course of history forever
'How will you be defined in the dictionary?' at QuizGalaxy.com</td>
Several scholars suggest that inconsistencies between explicated thouts and actions serve to compromise trust.
Translation: People don't like being lied to.
In order for trust to develop and be sustained, the individual's actions must be predictable with an acceptable degree of accuracy.
Translation: If you can't do what you say you will, people won't trust you.
Interpersonal trust is a widely studied element of trust and represents the most common application of trust in daily interactions.
Translation: Some researchers really can make money for stating the obvious.
Technology trust is...based on expectations of technology predictability, reliability and utility and influenced by the individual's predilection to trust technology.
Translation: If people expect computers to work, and they do, they'll trust them.
...technology trust is a uni-directional relationship as the technology is an inanimate object.
...there are no words...
The Follett report was massively influential, changing the shape of libraries in Higher Education across the country. The only copy available online has lots of letters missing. No, not typos, letters missing.
"They should take account of developments in formation technology, in the organisation of teaching and learning, and in ch provision, as well as the organisational arrangements which govern the 's place within the institution."
I don't know what a "ch" is but I'm pretty sure I've never been provided with one, and apparently, the invisible man has a place within the institution...
Somehow, even writing notes in pink pen doesn't make this one better...
Somehow, these two just seemed to go together:
![]() |
'What will your obituary say?' at QuizGalaxy.com |
It was Mr Potato Head last night, but this will do!
And then...
[noun]:
A poltergeist sent back in time to change the course of history forever
'How will you be defined in the dictionary?' at QuizGalaxy.com</td>