I'm playing as Persia and colonized almost like %30 of Africa. And built a few factories in my main territories. But they don't work %100 efficently. The factory output says a max number of goods can be produced per day but they produce less than the max number. I have resource to maintain the factory. For example my cement factory. It doesn't produce cement in max potantiel. I even have machine parts and iron to supply factory's maintainence. So please help me. My factories are dying, and I'm like losing 400 cash per day because of subs of factory. The year is almost 20th centuary and I'm in sphere of Russia. I'm also 14th rank country in the world. Thank you.
This is a BoxPlot. What this means? The lower part of the rectangle is the 25% quantile of the that building types. If the lower part is in the 10%, for example, it means that 75% (100% - 25%) of the factories have margin profit greater than 10%. The line in the middle is the 50% quantile, and the upper the 75%, what means, in our example, that 75% of the factories would have margin profit lower than 10%.
Basically**:** The x axis is the factory type and the y axis is the profit margin of the the 50% most profitable factory in that type. If the graph shows "20%" to "ammunition_type", for example, it means that the majority factories of "ammunition" have profit margin greater than 20%.
Suitable for: Key stage 1, Key stage 2, Key stage 3 Time period: Empire and Industry 1750-1850 Curriculum topics: Childhood through time, Industrial Revolution, Political and social reform Suggested inquiry questions: How successful was the 1833 Factory Act at solving the problem of children working in factories? Potential activities: Use these sources to write a campaigning letter against child factory labour in 1833; create a poster for such a campaign. Download: Lesson pack Did it solve the problems of children in factories?
People began to realise how bad these conditions were in many factories and started to campaign for improvements. There was a lot of resistance from factory owners who felt it would slow down the running of their factories and make their products more expensive. Many people also did not like the government interfering in their lives. Some parents, for instance, needed their children to go out to work from a young age, as they needed the money to help feed the family.
Suitable for: Key stage 1, Key stage 2, Key stage 3 Time period: Empire and Industry 1750-1850 Curriculum topics: Childhood through time, Industrial Revolution, Political and social reform Suggested inquiry questions: How successful was the 1833 Factory Act at solving the problem of children working in factories? Potential activities: Use these sources to write a campaigning letter against child factory labour in 1833; create a poster for such a campaign. Download: Lesson pack Related resources Past pleasures How did the Victorians have fun?
There isn't necessarily the wrong and proper way to play the game, but everything comes down to keeping the nation afloat regarding financial prosperity and economic stability. Of course, every industry has a trickle-down effect on the earlier said pointers, but a few factories work wonders if tackled right.
Automobiles: Automobile factories can be complicated to start with as they require many prerequisites to get one going. However, with the right amount of mandates met, importing automobiles is one way to boost the standard of living and shower in the export fortunes. Moreover, it has its merits in the regional areas, as logistics and transport efficiency gets a considerable boost
While dealing with backward nations that aren't open for trade yet, certain factories work in favor of their requirements. Although they might not sound lucrative, they are still the best bet to get a frail economy back on track and stabilize it.
Silk, Dye & Clothing: The Silk, Dye, and Clothing factories go hand in hand with each other and are more like three step package to get the ultimate reward. A stockpile rich in Sulfur extracts is an excellent incentive to get the textile industry up and running. Silk and Dye form the basic foundation for the clothing industry that works well in the regional trade and luxury clothing that can help stir up a good economy from exports.
Paper: Paper is one of the cheaper industries to start with outside the bare necessity circle. Paper factories are relatively easier to set up (provided the nation is prosperous with its input materials) and have a quick turnaround time with its produce.
This building has been an invitation from this local brand to its neighbors, in order to let them be part of its history, its productive activity, and logistics while offering this city a new cultural spot. That's the reason why the design of its enclosure has been so important and special, creating a solid building whose white facades enhance its industrial soul and structure, and a main front facade completely made of glass that allows the building not just to take advantage of the signature light of this area, called 'Costa del Sol', but also introduce an innovative approach to the traditional and hermetic architecture of factories. This creates an interesting dialogue between glass-made north facades and opaques elements made of 'in situ' sandwich panels that protect the building from harder solar orientations.
PDM adds the new concept of Clerk only financial factories. These are factories staffed entirely by Clerks with no Craftsmen, and have a capacity of 1,000 Clerks per level as opposed to the usual 10,000.
The company benefits from an 18-year-old state law that was originally intended to stamp out sweatshops but has come up short. The law allowed workers to recoup back wages from their factory boss, and any garment manufacturing company that does business with that person. Forever 21 says it is a retailer, not a manufacturer, and thus is always at least one step removed from Los Angeles factories.
The U.S. Department of Labor investigated 77 Los Angeles garment factories from April through July of 2016 and found that workers were paid as little as $4 and an average of $7 an hour for 10-hour days spent sewing clothes for Forever 21, Ross Dress for Less and TJ Maxx. One worker in West Covina made as little as $3.42 per hour during three weeks of sewing TJ Maxx clothing, according to the Department of Labor.
A knee-length Forever 21 dress made in one of the Los Angeles factories investigated by the government came with a price tag of $24.90. But it would have cost $30.43 to make that dress with workers earning the $7.25 federal minimum wage and even more to pay the $12 Los Angeles minimum, according to previously unpublished investigative results from the Labor Department.
TJX Cos., the parent company of TJ Maxx and Marshalls, has taken a different approach. After the Labor Department investigation, it began inspecting the Los Angeles factories used by its largest vendors, said company spokeswoman Doreen Thompson. If it finds violations, it may cancel an order in progress or prohibit suppliers from working with the factory, Thompson said.
Most apparel making has migrated overseas, though Los Angeles held on to a small niche of the business because it can produce limited runs quickly. To keep prices low, factories rely on immigrant workers willing to sew for a few dollars an hour.
As the National Archives reports, children caught up in the factories of the Industrial Revolution were subject to punishing hours and harsh consequences for honest mistakes that any primary school-aged kid might make. Only, they were making those sleep-deprived mistakes right next to early industrial equipment, meaning they risked losing limbs or even lives on a bad day.
The grisly condition that came to be known as "phossy jaw" all started with matchsticks. According to the Royal College of Surgeons of England, Victorian manufacturers discovered that adding a particular type of white phosphorus to the ignition end of a matchstick made it easier to light. Strike-anywhere matches soon became a pretty big business, and factories full of workers coming into close daily contact with white phosphorus sprang up across Britain.
Truth be told, the pollution of the Industrial Revolution had serious consequences that went far beyond the lands right around individual factories. According to Nature, climate scientists have found that temperatures had already begun to climb to unnatural levels by the middle of the 19th century. The culprit? While there aren't perfectly accurate instrument readings from that era, it's all but certain to have been greenhouse gases produced by the many, many factories operating across the globe. And as the World Health Organization (WHO) reports, climate change has had and will continue to present serious and even deadly health consequences.
That's the reason why the design of its enclosure has been so important and special, creating a solid building whose white facades enhance its industrial soul and structure, and a main front facade completely made of glass that allow the building not just to take advantage of the signature light of this area, called 'Costa del Sol', but also introduce an innovative approach to the traditional and hermetic architecture of factories.
One of the major reasons that brought change in the Victorian England was the industrial revolution during the 1800s which led to the emergence of numerous factories. The first operative factory can be traced by to 1721 but with industrialization, more and more factories can into existence.
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