Kvs Availability Tool Hack

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Vaniria Setser

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Jun 29, 2024, 8:03:20 AM6/29/24
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You can select which tools are available in your course and determine if guests and observers can access them. For example, if you won't use the course messages tool, make it unavailable. No one can see it or access it, including you, until you make it available again. On the Tool Availability page, available tools are listed alphabetically.

For the tools you make available in your course, you can add links to them on the course menu and in course areas. If you add the Tools area to your course menu, students see all the tools that you have made available on one page.

On the Control Panel, expand the Customization section and select Tool Availability. Select or clear the check boxes of the tools you want to use in your course and which users will have access to these tools.

If tools are made unavailable after a period of being available, either at the course level by you or at the system level by your institution, no content is deleted from the system. If the tools are made available again, the existing content remains and becomes accessible.

Select Filter by to sort the table based on availability status for the tool and for the role users have in a course. Filtering makes it easier to see which tools are available and visible, and change settings based on those criteria.

In the menu next to Email on the Tool Availability page, select Email Settings. You can decide whether students have the ability to email certain groups of users in your course, such as instructors, teaching assistants, or course groups. Use these settings to help prevent email misuse in your course.

The settings you choose here don't affect your ability to send email in a course. Your institution may restrict which options are available. Unavailable options are shown in the list, but appear grey and the check box is disabled.

The new Parking Space Availability tool provides real-time information, offering an estimated occupancy level for Blue permit tier parking across various lots and parking structures on the U-M campus and Michigan Medicine.

This application is a result of our relentless drive to enhance the U-M parking experience. With the introduction of this tool, you can now plan your commute better and save some valuable time. It functions based on parking permit activity, thus providing a fluid and highly dynamic overview of the parking landscape.

This new addition should provide you with a more convenient and seamless campus parking experience. Your feedback is highly valuable to us in this initial phase, so please feel free to share your thoughts and experiences using the new tool.

Growing throughout most of the eastern United States, white oak (Quercus alba) is a hardwood species that has long been used as the major source of wood for bourbon barrels, in part because it is resistant to rot and decay and offers the strength and durability needed to age whiskey. White oak barrels are also used for aging American whiskey, rum, tequila, sherry and wine.

There are over 10 million barrels of bourbon aging in distillery warehouses in Kentucky alone, and with growing market demand, the spirits industry is facing continuous market pressure to increase bourbon production. Since distilleries are legally required to age bourbon in oak containers, cooperages (wooden barrel manufacturers) are always looking to find new sources of white oak. In addition to identifying where white oak grows, resource managers and procurement foresters need to know the tree size, proximity to urban areas and manufacturing facilities, the impact white oak has on drinking water, and forest ownership. These multiple factors are all used to help determine accessibility, viability, and resource sustainability.

The main widget used in the Bourbon Barrel Oak Availability Tool is the newly released Suitability Modeler widget that allows users to combine different layers so multiple factors can be evaluated at once. The suitability Modeler widget is a tool that provides an interactive, exploratory environment for creating and evaluating a suitability model. In suitability modeling analysis, data is classified and combined and the model locations relative to each other based on given criteria to identify sites most suitable for a specific use. The suitability modeler widget uses a hosted weighted overlay service. Hosted weighted overlay services are built from mosaic datasets that are shared as image services.

The WRO used within the Bourbon Barrel Oak Availability Tool is preconfigured to identify and locate white oak resources. The WRO was compiled with seven criteria layers relevant to white oak resourcing, enabling white oak procurement foresters, land managers, landowners and resource managers to make better and more informed planning and procurement decisions.

By design, the user interface offers a simplified user experience with widgets available for navigating around the map and analyzing the pre-loaded weighted raster overlay data. On the left-hand side of the app, widgets are available for zooming into the map, zooming out of the map, going to the default map view, finding a specific location, and resetting the map orientation. On the right-hand side users will find the suitability modeler. The modeler offers a three-step workflow plus a bonus step allowing users to:

Specify which layers to include in the modeling output by selecting from layers in the configured WRO service. Once the suitability criteria layers have been selected, move to step 2 to design the model.

Assign each selected layer a relative importance in the analysis by specifying the individual weights in the percentage (%) text box. All weights must add to 100 percent. Assign suitability scores (0 to 9) to the ranges for each of the selected layers. Optionally, change the color ramp for the results. This panel includes the following buttons:

For users who have defined an area and would like to evaluate topographic variations within their area of interest, the app also includes an elevation profiler. By clicking the up arrow at the bottom of the app you can draw a line directly on the map to get an elevation profile. Additionally, you may also select the measure tool on the right-hand side of the application if you need to calculate the distance between two locations.

Start by browsing DVC rental availability. This list reflects the availability status of all Disney Vacation Club resorts, and also gives you the ability to compare rental offerings by price. Please note: Availability with DVC can change very quickly. This list is updated several times per day and availability will be verified by our team once your request is received.

The Service Availability and Readiness Assessment (SARA) is a health facility assessment tool designed to assess and monitor the service availability and readiness of the health sector and to generate evidence to support the planning and managing of a health system. SARA is designed as a systematic survey to generate a set of tracer indicators of service availability and readiness. The survey objective is to generate reliable and regular information on service delivery (such as the availability of key human and infrastructure resources), on the availability of basic equipment, basic amenities, essential medicines, and diagnostic capacities, and on the readiness of health facilities to provide basic health-care interventions relating to family planning, child health services, basic and comprehensive emergency obstetric care, HIV, TB, malaria, and non-communicable diseases.

Sound information on the supply and quality of health services is necessary for health systems management, monitoring, and evaluation. The efforts to scale up interventions for HIV/AIDS, malaria, safe motherhood, child health, and to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) through global health partnerships have drawn attention to the need for strong country monitoring of health services, covering the public, private-for profit, and the private not-for-profit sectors, and their readiness to deliver key interventions. With the increased demand for accountability and the need to demonstrate results at country and global levels, information is needed to track how health systems respond to increased inputs and improved processes over time and the impact such inputs and processes have on improved health outcomes and better health status.

The SARA survey requires health facility visits with data collected based on key informant interviews and observation of key items. The survey can either be carried out as a sample or a census; the choice between these methodologies will depend on a number of elements including the county's resources, the objectives of the survey, and the availability of a Master Facility List (MFL).

A census is the recommended design methodology for forming the baseline of service availability and readiness data and is a requirement for calculating service availability indicators. The recommended data source for information on service availability is a national master facility list of all public and private facilities. A facility census is usually required to establish and maintain a national master facility list. A facility census aims to cover ALL public and private health facilities in a country. The census is designed to form the basis for a national and sub-national monitoring system of service delivery.

The recommended design methodology for collecting information on service readiness is a sample survey. Sampling is done in a systematic way to ensure that the findings are representative of the country and region/district in which the survey is being conducted. Drawing a random sample of health facilities will be much more complicated if the country does not have a comprehensive and up-to-date master facility list. Therefore, it is highly recommended to invest in establishing a master facility list that includes all public and private facilities.

The SARA survey is designed to generate a set of core indicators on key inputs and outputs of the health system, which can be used to measure progress in health system strengthening over time. Tracer indicators aim to provide objective information about whether or not a facility meets the required conditions to support provision of basic or specific services with a consistent level of quality and quantity. Summary or composite indicators, also called indices, can be used to summarize and communicate information about multiple indicators and domains of indicators. Indices can be used for general and service specific availability and readiness.

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