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FAQs
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What is the point of converting *.doc or *.docx to *.pdf?
Donald Otis’ answer outlines good reasons why a document might be distributed as a PDF, including hardware independence. Because basic PDF readers have been free, while Microsoft Word has historically been expensive, there was no assurance that a recipient would be able to view (let alone edit) a Word document. Even with Word installed, a reader might not have the fonts installed that the author used, so a document might look different.By distributing a PDF, one could be sure that a document could be viewed. Free alternatives like OpenOffice have historically been able to open Word files, but not always the most recent formats.Now that Word Online can be used for free, anyone can view a Word file for free, but authors don't necessarily want their documents to be edited by others.
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What is eSignly and is it a good digital signature tool?
Esignly is an e signature app which provides proficient and innovative e signature solutions to its customers. Esignly is a product of Cyber Infrastructure (P) Limited and offers a line of services right from creating, signing, and sending to tracking and managing documents online.This electronic signature app provides its user with a single account which can le logged in from any electronic device and access it anytime.Here is a list of features provided this app that proves Esignly’s reputation in the industry as an admirable Digital Signature Tool-API- Helps in doing eSignatures swiftly ...
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What are the best features of Microsoft Office 365?
Here’s a breakdown of some awesome Features Office 3651. Work Smarter, EverywhereAfter buying Office 365, you also gain access to its accompanying mobile apps and browser apps. This allows you to access their cloud service from any up to date web browser on your desktop or mobile device. Even better yet, you don’t have to install Office software on your computer to do this.The mobile app allows you to access all of your Office 365 subscriptions and Office products right from your smartphone or tablet; this includes Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Onenote, and more. Cut the cord and stop working on your PC only — download the Microsoft Office 365 mobile app to stay productive, even while on the go.2. Enjoy 50 GB of StorageEach Office 365 user receives a whopping 50 GB of storage with Exchange Online; this can be used to save emails, calendar events, task lists, meeting notes, contact information, and email attachments.You can save some more space in your mailbox by utilizing the OneDrive cloud storage feature to share attachments.Your OneDrive storage is also synced to your device, enabling you to work offline on files. As soon as you reconnect to the web, the newest versions of your documents will be automatically uploaded to your cloud storage. The new versions of your documents will also be sent to any other connected device, including your phone or tablet — nifty!3. Edit Documents with Real-Time Co-AuthoringCollaborate online and see changes your team makes to shared documents within your Office apps as they happen with the real-time co-authoring feature in Word. Save your file to OneDrive cloud storage or SharePoint so your team can access the document and make any necessary edits or updates. You can also share it directly from Word by utilizing a handily integrated sidebar. As the publisher and access-giver, you can edit accessibility settings at any time.With the improved version control that was rolled out with Office 2016 co-authoring, you can see which changes to the document were made by which contributor and when the update was made. You can also easily revert back to a previous version of the file whenever you need to.4. Connect with Co-WorkersYou may not have known this, but Office apps include a Skype in-app integration. You can use this feature to instant message your teammates, share your screen during meetings and have audio or visual conversations — without even exiting the Office apps you’re working in. You can continue Skype conversations even after you close your office apps via your desktop or mobile version of Skype. The best part? Your team will receive unlimited Skype minutes.Source: Microsoft5. Send Links, Not FilesIt’s time to move away from email attachments. It’s never been easier to share documents for co-authoring!Simply upload your file to Office 365’s cloud storage. Then, write your email via Outlook or the Outlook web app. Rather than attaching your document to the email, you can insert a link to the file on your cloud. Outlook will automatically allow email recipients to edit the document you wish to share. You can always change permissions on any document at your convenience.6. Convert OneNote Items into Outlook Calendar EventsEasily configure OneNote items to tasks within your Outlook calendar. You can also assign tasks to colleagues, complete with follow-up reminders and concise due dates. You can also transfer meeting notes taken in OneNote via email to your teammates, and add important details (date, location, and attendees) to their respective meeting.7. Use Your Mouse as a Laser Pointer during PowerPoint PresentationsWith only a simple keyboard shortcut (Ctrl + P), your mouse can be used as a laser pointer during your PowerPoint presentations. You can also use the “presenter mode” commands while using this feature.The laser pointer tool has been a nifty trick within older versions of the office apps for years; however, it was only recently integrated for touch-screen devices. All you have to do is hold down on your device’s screen, and the laser pointer will appear.8. Create a Power Map Using ExcelTurn data into a 3-D interactive map with Power Map, one of the many Power BI-enhanced data visualization features that Excel has to offer. It comes with three different filters: List, Range, or Advanced. The Power Map will help you not only convey your data more effectively, but also support your claims by creating a tangible story from the numbers.
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How is Harvard Business School so out of touch with Apple Pay?
“Rail travel at high speeds is not possible because passengers, unable to breathe, would die of asphyxia.”-Dionysius Lardner, Professor of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy at University College, London, 1830It hurts my heart to see an esteemed university publish such a regrettable article. It is also shocking that there was no empirical based insight published, just agenda ladened conjecture. In some ways I am not surprised. Academia has misunderstood the payments industry for over 50 years and I have tried and have been successful to help quite a number of well known professors understand the details. However, if one were to go by the postulations some Professors have presented over the years, the payments industry should not exist. There is much to learn from these insights and surprisingly many of them were adopted by some payment startups, advisors, board members and VCs. I will address the idle conjecture from this article, section by section:Apple Pay’s Technology Adoption ProblemApple wants to convert your iPhone into a digital wallet with Apple Pay. Professors Benjamin Edelman and Willy Shih assess its chances for success and wonder if consumers have a compelling reason to make the switch.This is a mostly correct insight. It may turn out to be ironic wording on the part of the author. To be clear, no one needs to “switch”.On the eve of debuting its digital payment system, Apple Pay, two Harvard Business School professors think the Cupertino company will have trouble coming up with an equally compelling message to drive sales of a service that allows you to pay at the retail counter with a swipe of an iPhone.No iPhones are “swiped” during a transaction, they are held at short distance for a few seconds in front of a customer facing terminal. "What does it do for me as a consumer?" asks Associate Professor Benjamin Edelman. “Why would I want to trade for something that already works [e.g. credit and debit cards], something that doesn't complain when it gets wet in the rain, something that doesn't complain when I launder my pants?"Why would I want to trade in an iPod, for something that already works, the Sony Walkman and use the cassette tapes that already work. This is a comment that shows a professor that truly does not understand the history of technology. Especially, he adds, when those cards give users and additional 1 or 2 percent off the purchase price. “I think Apple has its work ahead in convincing thoughtful and potentially skeptical customers," says Edelman.There is little that one can draw from this passage. There is no loss of 1 or 2 percent if the cards offered them before, they will be offered in the exact same manner via Apple Pay. ON WITH THE SHOWReports say Apple will roll out the digital payment service later this week, with perhaps more details coming at a press conference Thursday. But will it catch on, especially when several other similar services with big name sponsors such as Google have failed to gain much traction?The element that was overlooked by this professor is the fact that very little is similar to the business processes and business relationships Apple used in relationship to Google. Apple choose wisely to work with every element of the existing payments ecosystem. History will show, and likely this university will teach, that this was the primary premise that made Apple Pay the largest change since the invention of the magnetic stripe. Apple has a chicken-and-egg game to solve. Consumers won't use the service unless they are in use at a compelling number of stores. But merchants won’t install the expensive near field communications readers used by Apple Pay unless consumer demand is high.First off, Apple must convince merchants to adopt its service, says Willy Shih, the Robert and Jane Cizik Professor of Management Practice.“I THINK APPLE HAS ITS WORK AHEAD IN CONVINCING THOUGHTFUL AND POTENTIALLY SKEPTICAL CUSTOMERS”Only about 10 percent of retailers use NFC readers, and at least one retailer—Best Buy—stopped using them because they were too expensive. Officials with both Best Buy and Walmart have said the retailers have no plans, at least right now, of accepting the new payments technology in their stores.There will always be a “Chicken / Egg” issue with any system that would require equipment upgrades. However this article assumes over 200,000 of the most popular businesses in the US is not “a compelling number of stores”. It took 30 years for Visa and MasterCard to have over 200,000 businesses. It took over 5 years for Discover to have over 200,000 business locations. The professors did not even do a single empirical study to gain insights about the number of actual businesses and the demand to upgrade. I am performing these studies and can say that early results point of almost 300,000 locations and a demand that has shot up by over 3,000% and growing among small to large businesses.Thus Apple will not have “work” to convince merchants, the huge drive is coming from merchants and banks wanting to implement the service.Best Buy stopped using NFC for only one reason, they were not paying PIN based debit rates for these transactions and Apple is on the way to get these types of cards to be confirmed using biometric PINs. Shih believes merchants who consider adopting Apple Pay will naturally wonder: What do we get out of this? And they will specifically want to know if they will be asked to pay higher fees than credit card companies are charging?The data that Professor Shih has is invalid. The merchant is paying the exact same rate as with any other credit card. What they get out of it is manifold but no one can argue that the increase in speed is one foundational benefit. "Consumers might be motivated to do it, but if I don't have the merchant side in place, it doesn't matter," Shih says. "The merchants certainly aren't going to be motivated if the economic model is less favorable than today. It’s a complicated puzzle."The data that Professor Shih has is invalid. The economic model is not a “complicated puzzle to anyone other then Professor Shih.Apple has touted that Apple Pay will be supported by several leading retailers, including Bloomingdale's, McDonald's, and Macy's—and that it will work at about 220,000 merchant locations across the United States that have enabled contactless payments. But some analysts believe that's a small number compared with the nine million US merchants that currently accept credit cards. In short, Apple has a long way to go to knock off the established credit card system, Shih says.There is some valid information here. However 80% of the dollar volume in retail payment card sales come from 20% of merchants. Apple will have coverage of about 70% of these merchants by year end. My research suggests that a tremendous number of smaller merchants will fill in these numbers as 2015 winds out. "Ecosystems are very delicately balanced, and the current payment system represents a balance that has resulted from 40 years of evolution. There's a lot of inertia around that," Shih says. "You can have great technology, but you really have to line up the complementary assets so all the pieces play with you and they are motivated to make it work. At the end of the day, Apple is going to have to make the economics work for everybody. That is a hard job.”Professor Shih is still functioning on invalid data about the “economics”. The economics are exactly the same.DO CUSTOMERS CARE?Which brings us to the customer side of the chicken-and-egg conundrum. Millions of shoppers have used cards for years, with little hassle. Edelman points out that people will continue to carry cards even if digital payments gain some traction, so the barrier to overcome for mass acceptance is even higher.Millions of people used payment cards every day at Starbucks. But somehow 6 million weekly transactions in the U.S a full 15% of transactions made at the U.S. Starbucks-operated stores are made on the Starbucks wallet. The barriers these users overcome are huge, they have to buy credits using a payment card to even operate the wallet, yet this barrier is overcome 6 million times per week.Edelman has studied Bitcoin, a software-based online payment system, and he sees similarities between technology adoption roadblocks Bitcoin has encountered and issues Apple Pay is likely to face."Apple Pay has the same problems as Bitcoin: There's no reason for the regular consumer to use it," he says. “Why would a consumer want to make a $100 purchase with Bitcoin when the consumer can pay with a credit card and get 2 percent cash back?"There is absolutely no comparison to Apple Pay and Bitcoin. Professor Edelman is also operating on invalid data. The payment card that pays 2% back will continue to pay 2% back with Apple Pay.In addition to the limited number of merchants, Apple Pay appears to be limited to users of the latest iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, and Apple Watch—which leaves out many consumers with older iPhones or Android models.“Apple might be hamstrung by an incompatibility issue that the company intentionally introduced," Edelman says.The system works on iPhone 6 series phones. There is no doubt that there will be similar Android initiatives. The picture is very clear, if you have an iPhone 6 series phone, it works. This is not an incompatibility issue. Shih agrees that selling technology is tricky in a market full of incompatible products.Yes, yes it is."We're in a period now where you see this design competition with competing offerings, and on top of that, you have a platform competition where everyone has their network effects," he said. "It's like PlayStation versus Xbox. The technology convergence has brought us to a place where people are scrambling to come up with a new platform and trying to become the new dominant design.”Great insight about video game platforms. However they have no analogy with the subject of Apple Pay.Other companies that have attempted mobile payments have run into similar problems. Google Wallet was limited by its compatibility with different types of phones and cellular networks. And Softcard, which was backed by major wireless carriers, has seen little traction with its mobile wallet for similar reasons.This is correct. This is one of the most accurate insights from these professors. The destiny of Google Wallet was never in the hands of Google and thus it contributed to the failure of the system. This is not the case with Apple Pay. PITCHING SECURITYOne marketing pitch Apple is sure to try out with potential users is security, especially after notable bsignNowes at Home Depot and Target. When a customer pays with an iPhone, cashiers won't see the consumer's name, credit card number or security code because Apple uses a fingerprint reader on its recent iPhones to confirm identities. And when consumers add a credit or debit card with Apple Pay, the card number is not stored by Apple—instead, Apple provides a unique device account number for each transaction. In addition, the company says it won’t collect consumers' purchase history.Very accurate assertion.Edelman questions whether addressing security and privacy will be enough of a carrot to wean consumers off of their beloved plastic. Hesays other companies have tried to market the security angle, including the RevolutionCard, a PIN-based credit card that had no name, signature, or account number on it so that if it got lost or stolen, it couldn't be used unless the PIN was known. "It was stillborn," Edelman says. "It didn't work as a feature set. No one cared.”Professor Edelman is partly correct about the failure of Steve Case’s Gratis Card and The Revolution Money Card. However the professor is operating on invalid data. Apple Pay is not a card replacement. Apple Pay is a security wrapped around the existing payment card issuer relationship.“APPLE PAY HAS THE SAME PROBLEMS AS BITCOIN. THERE’S NO REASON FOR THE REGULAR CONSUMER TO USE IT”Even recent high-profile data bsignNowes have not led consumers to abandon credit cards in signNow numbers. "Security doesn't work for the thoughtful consumer," Edelman says. "(Data bsignNowes) mostly mean inconvenience for the consumer because the losses are really borne by banks, merchants, and credit cards, not by consumers."Besides, Shih wonders whether data will be any safer with the Apple Pay system.I think Professor Shih may need to conduct a study on how the Target bsignNow impacted consumers. I have not conducted a deep study but can state clearly that some consumers had their bank account zeroed out in the early days of the bsignNow and the banks were not crediting back the transaction that appeared “valid” from debit card bsignNowes. I know of a case where a single mom had missed rent and food because of the missing funds in her checking account for days. Although this is anecdotal, there are many examples vetted by the media. I would also ask Professor Shih to speak with any merchant that has been a victim of a major bsignNow about how systems like Apple Pay would have saved them millions of dollars in fines and replacement costs to card holders. "The fingerprint reader generating a unique code is pretty smart," he acknowledges. "But it electronically seems to do the same thing as a PIN code. And to the extent that the code goes into the existing payment network that's still not secure, have we really accomplished anything?"TouchID is far and away more secure then a 4 digit PIN code. The math is quite simple. But just the logic, it take very little time to guess a PIN number. It takes a great deal of time to try to fake a finger print that is acceptable to TouchID. In many cases it is impossible to fake a fingerprint unless you have intimate access to the target. Thus a faster way to steal money is a PIN number and not a finger print. CAN YOU PAY ME NOW?Other technical questions remain. Edelman wants to know whether Apple Pay will work if the phone isn’t charged, or in areas with poor cell reception?This would be better addressed by studying the technology and not using a a guessing game. Apple Pay will work with zero cell or WiFi reception. Apple Pay will work with a low battery. Apple Pay will stop working if there is no way to power on the iPhone. Apple may release more details tomorrow, so time will tell whether the company will address some of the system's potential shortcomings—and perhaps more important, whether regardless of any shortcomings, merchants and consumers will embrace this new mode of payment. Either way, even if Apple stumbles with its mobile wallet, the company will likely survive the reputation hit.Yes, they addressed the shortcomings. Apple announced that instead of 7 banks supporting Apple Pay payment cards, there are now over 500."Any failure Apple experiences here will be more than offset by the legions of fans that like their other stuff," Edelman said. “I'm not losing any sleep for Apple."I think Professor Edelman can sleep soundly. He has articulated how some academics, even notable academics are all too human. We are fallible. I hope that history is kind with these Professors.
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What do Americans hate about Europe when they go visit?
This is not an “answer” but an analysis of the range of answers given. “Hate” is an exaggeration as the factors forwarded are merely annoyances or unexpected differences; readers from less developed nations would label the laments as “Rich Country Concerns” (i.e. petty for most people). My answer is based on decades of life and travel in Western Europe - not Eastern Europe.The major gripes are that things are not as “convenient”, dimensions are small, people are “unfriendly” and the customer is not “always right” in Europe. Let’s see if those “complaints” are worth writing home about or if ...
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Which are the frequently asked interview questions for Java Engineers ?
Some of the frequently asked Interview questions for java developers are:1 What is an object ? 2 What is method overriding in java ? 3 What is super keyword in java ? 4 What is method overloading in java ? 5 What is difference between c++ and Java ? 6 What is JIT compiler ? 7 What is bytecode in java ? 8 Difference between method overloading and method overriding in java ? 9 Difference between abstract class and interface ? 10 Why java is platform independent? 11 Difference between this( and super( in java ?12 How to call one constructor from the other constructor ? 13 what are static blocks and static initalizers in Java ? 14 What is method in java ? 15 What is constructor in java ? 17 Difference between Character Constant and String Constant in java ?18 Why main( method is public, static and void in java ? 19 Explain about main( method in java ? 20 What is difference between length and length( method in java ? 21 What is ASCII Code? 22 What is Unicode ? 23 What are constants and how to create constants in java? OOPS24 Explain about object oriented programming and its features? 25 What is Abstraction? 26 What is Encapsulation? 27 What is the difference between abstraction and encapsulation? 28 List out benefits of object oriented programming language? 29 Differences between traditional programming language and object oriented programming language? 30 What is Inheritance? 31 What is Polymorphism? 32 How does Java implement polymorphism? 33 Explain the different forms of Polymorphism 34 What is runtime polymorphism or dynamic method dispatch? 35 What is Dynamic Binding? 36 What is method overloading? 37 What is method overriding? 38 What are the differences between method overloading and method overriding? 39 Can overloaded methods be override too? 40 Is it possible to override the main method? 41 How to invoke a superclass version of an Overridden method? 42 What is super? 43 How do you prevent a method from being overridden? 44 What is an Interface? 45 Can we instantiate an interface? 46 Can we create an object for an interface? 47 Do interfaces have member variables? 48 What modifiers are allowed for methods in an Interface? 49 What is a marker interface? 50 What is an abstract class? 51 Can we instantiate an abstract class? 52 What are the differences between Interface and Abstract class? 53 When should I use abstract classes and when should I use interfaces? 54 When you declare a method as abstract, can other nonabstract methods access it? 55 Can there be an abstract class with no abstract methods in it? 56 What is IS-A relationship in java?57 What is HAS A relationship in java?58 Difference between IS-A and HAS-A relationship in java?59 Explain about instanceof operator in java?60 What does null mean in java?61 Can we have multiple classes in single file ?62 What all access modifiers are allowed for top class ?63 What are packages in java?64 Can we have more than one package statement in source file ?65 Can we define package statement after import statement in java?66 What are identifiers in java?67 What are access modifiers in java?68 What is the difference between access specifiers and access modifiers in java?69 What access modifiers can be used for class ?70 Explain what access modifiers can be used for methods?71 Explain what access modifiers can be used for variables?72 What is final access modifier in java?73 Explain about abstract classes in java?74 Can we create constructor in abstract class ?75 What are abstract methods in java?Type Casting 76 What is TypeConversion? 77 Explain Implicit Conversion/ Widening/Automatic Type Conversion? 78 What is Explicit Conversion/Narrowing/Casting? 79 Can a double value be cast to byte? How to cast double value to byte with help of the example? 80 Can a Boolean primitive value to be converted to any other primitive in java? 81 What is autoboxing and autounboxing? 82 What are advantages of autoboxing and autounboxing? 83 How to cast objects or what is object casting? 84 What is upcasting or downcasting? Exception Handling85 State some situations where exceptions may arise in java?86 What is Exception handling in java?87 What is an eror in Java?88 What are advantages of Exception handling in java?89 In how many ways we can do exception handling in java?90 List out five keywords related to Exception handling ?91 Explain try and catch keywords in java?92 Can we have try block without catch block?93 Can we have multiple catch block for a try block?94 Explain importance of finally block in java?95 Can we have any code between try and catch blocks?96 Can we have any code between try and finally blocks?97 Can we catch more than one exception in single catch block?98 What are checked Exceptions?99 What are unchecked exceptions in java?100 Explain differences between checked and Unchecked exceptions in java?101 What is default Exception handling in java?102 Explain throw keyword in java?103 Can we write any code after throw statement?104 Explain importance of throws keyword in java?105 Explain the importance of finally over return statement?106 Explain a situation where finally block will not be executed?107 Can we use catch statement for checked exceptions?108 What are user defined exceptions?109 Can we rethrow the same exception from catch handler?110 Can we nested try statements in java?111 Explain the importance of throwable class and its methods?112 Explain when ClassNotFoundException will be raised ?113 Explain when NoClassDefFoundError will be raised ?Nested Class & Inner Class114 What are inner classes or non static nested classes in java? 115 Why to use nested classes in java? 116 Explain about static nested classes in java? 117 How to instantiate static nested classes in java? 118 Explain about method local inner classes or local inner classes in java? 119 Explain about features of local inner class? 120 Explain about anonymous inner classes in java? 121 Explain restrictions for using anonymous inner classes? 122 Is this valid in java ? can we instantiate interface in java? 123 Explain about member inner classes? 124 How to instantiate member inner class? 125 How to do encapsulation in java? 126 What are reference variables in java ? 127 Will the compiler creates a default constructor if I have a parameterized constructor in the class? 128 Can we have a method name same as class name in java? 129 Can we override constructors in java? 130 Can Static methods access instance variables in java? 131 How do we access static members in java? 132 Can we override static methods in java? 133 Difference between object and reference? 134 Objects or references which of them gets garbage collected? 135 How many times finalize method will be invoked ? who invokes finalize( method in java?136 Can we able to pass objects as an arguments in java? 137 Explain wrapper classes in java? 138 Explain different types of wrapper classes in java? 139 Explain about transient variables in java? 140 Can we serialize static variables in java? 141 What is type conversion in java? 142 Explain about Automatic type conversion in java? 143 Explain about narrowing conversion in java? 144 Explain the importance of import keyword in java? 145 Explain naming conventions for packages ? 146 What is classpath ? 147 What is jar ? 148 What is the scope or life time of instance variables ? 149 Explain the scope or life time of class variables or static variables? 150 Explain scope or life time of local variables in java? 151 Explain about static imports in java? 152 Can we define static methods inside interface? 153 Define interface in java? 154 What is the purpose of interface? 155 Explain features of interfaces in java? 156 Explain enumeration in java? 157 Explain restrictions on using enum? 158 Explain about field hiding in java? 159 Explain about Varargs in java? 160 Explain where variables are created in memory? 161 Can we use Switch statement with Strings? 162 In java how do we copy objects? Theads163 What is thread in java? 164 Difference between process and thread? 165 What is multitasking ? 166 What are different types of multitasking? 167 What are the benefits of multithreaded programming? 168 Explain thread in java? 169 List Java API that supports threads? 170 Explain about main thread in java? 171 In how many ways we can create threads in java? 172 Explain creating threads by implementing Runnable class? 173 Explain creating threads by extending Thread class ? 174 Which is the best approach for creating thread ? 175 Explain the importance of thread scheduler in java? 176 Explain the life cycle of thread? 177 Can we restart a dead thread in java? 178 Can one thread block the other thread? 179 Can we restart a thread already started in java? 180 What happens if we don’t override run method ? 181 Can we overload run( method in java? 182 What is a lock or purpose of locks in java? 183 In how many ways we can do synchronization in java? 184 What are synchronized methods ? 185 When do we use synchronized methods in java? 186 When a thread is executing synchronized methods , then is it possible to execute other synchronized methods simultaneously by other threads? 187 When a thread is executing a synchronized method , then is it possible for the same thread to access other synchronized methods of an object ? 188 What are synchronized blocks in java? 189 When do we use synchronized blocks and advantages of using synchronized blocks? 190 What is class level lock ? 191 Can we synchronize static methods in java? 192 Can we use synchronized block for primitives? 193 What are thread priorities and importance of thread priorities in java? 194 Explain different types of thread priorities ? 195 How to change the priority of thread or how to set priority of thread? 196 If two threads have same priority which thread will be executed first ? 197 What all methods are used to prevent thread execution ? 198 Explain yield( method in thread class ? 199 Is it possible for yielded thread to get chance for its execution again ? 200 Explain the importance of join( method in thread class? 201 Explain purpose of sleep( method in java? 202 Assume a thread has lock on it, calling sleep( method on that thread will release the lock? 203 Can sleep() method causes another thread to sleep? 204 Explain about interrupt() method of thread class ? 205 Explain about interthread communication and how it takes place in java? 206 Explain wait() , notify() and notifyAll() methods of object class ? 207 Explain why wait(), notify() and notifyAll() methods are in Object class rather than in thread class? 208 Explain IllegalMonitorStateException and when it will be thrown? 209 when wait(), notify(),notifyAll() methods are called does it releases the lock or holds the acquired lock? 210 Explain which of the following methods releases the lock when yield(), join(),sleep(),wait(),notify(), notifyAll()methods are executed?211 What are thread groups? 212 What are thread local variables ? 213 What are daemon threads in java? 214 How to make a non daemon thread as daemon? 215 Can we make main() thread as daemon?Collection Framework216 What is collection ?217 Difference between collection, Collection and Collections in java?218 Explain about Collection interface in java ?219 List the interfaces which extends collection interface ?220 Explain List interface ?221 Explain methods specific to List interface ?222 List implementations of List Interface ?223 Explain about ArrayList ?224 Difference between Array and ArrayList ?225 What is vector?226 Difference between arraylist and vector ?227 Define Linked List and its features with signature ?228 Define Iterator and methods in Iterator?229 In which order the Iterator iterates over collection?230 Explain ListIterator and methods in ListIterator?231 Explain about Sets ?232 Implementations of Set interface ?233 Explain HashSet and its features ?234 Explain Tree Set and its features?235 When do we use HashSet over TreeSet?236 What is Linked HashSet and its features?237 Explain about Map interface in java?238 What is linked hashmap and its features?239 What is SortedMap interface?240 What is Hashtable and explain features of Hashtable?241 Difference between HashMap and Hashtable?242 Difference between arraylist and linkedlist?243 Difference between Comparator and Comparable in java?244 What is concurrent hashmap and its features ?245 Difference between Concurrent HashMap and Hashtable and collections.synchronizedHashMap?246 Explain copyOnWriteArrayList and when do we use copyOnWriteArrayList?247 Explain about fail fast iterators in java?248 Explain about fail safe iterators in java?Serialization249 What is serialization in java? 250 What is the main purpose of serialization in java? 251 What are alternatives to java serialization? 252 Explain about serializable interface in java? 253 How to make object serializable in java? 254 What is serial version UID and its importance in java? 255 What happens if we don’t define serial version UID ? 256 Can we serialize static variables in java? 257 When we serialize an object does the serialization mechanism saves its references too? 258 If we don’t want some of the fields not to serialize How to do that? 259 Explain importance of object class in java? 260 Explain purpose of object class or why object class is super class for all java classes? 261 Explain Object class methods? 262 List methods which can be overrided from Object class? 263 Explain purpose of toString( method in java?Strings 264 Explain Strings in java?265 Difference between Strings and Character Arrays in java?266 Explain importance of String class in java?267 In how many ways we can create Strings in java?268 Explain how to create Strings using String literal and advantages of creating Strings using String literal?Class Loaders 269 What are classloaders and different types of class loaders in java?270 What is BootStrap class loader and how does it works?271 What is Extensions class loader and how does it works?272 What is application class loader and how does it works?273 When an object becomes eligible for garbage collection?274 Who performs garbage collection?275 When does garbage collector run?276 Which algorithm garbage collector uses to perform garbage collection?277 List out different garbage collection algorithms?278 Can we force JVM for garbage collection?279 How to request jvm to perform garbage collection operation?280 Explain the purpose of finalize method in relation to Garbage collection?281 How many times finalize method is called on an Object?282 Once an object is garbage collected can it become signNowable again?283 How to write a code that makes an object eligible for garbage collection?
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