A:After witnessing the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, which saw Pakistan's surrender albeit with many favorable conditions, Mahmood attended the winter seminar at Multan and delivered a speech on atomic science. On 20 January 1972, the President of Pakistan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, approved a crash atomic weapon program, under Munir Ahmad Khan, for the sake of "national survivor." Though, he continued his work at the KANUPP I engineering division. B:Given what the passage suggests happened in Pakistan in the year after the surrender, does it sound like Indian officials would nevertheless have felt that they did everything they could to prevent such an unfavorable outcome? Answer: lying
A:Application developers writing in 6301 assembler struggled with the small amount of RAM (2 kB) and the lack of an operating system. Another difficulty for developers was with the performance limitations of the earliest DATAPAKs, which used a serial-access internal architecture, as opposed to random access. Retrieving, for example, byte 2000 from a DATAPAK meant issuing successive hardware commands to either step from the current read position one address place at time until position 2000 was reached or, in the worst case, resetting the read position to zero and then issuing a step-forward command 2000 times. B:If a developer had a new, untouched version of this machine, would he or she be able to start it up and begin work on a command line, without any additional external inputs? Answer: lying
A:Application developers writing in 6301 assembler struggled with the small amount of RAM (2 ;kB) and the lack of an operating system that was familiar to academics at the time. Another difficulty for developers was with the performance limitations of the earliest DATAPAKs, which used a serial-access internal architecture, as opposed to random access. Retrieving, for example, byte 2000 from a DATAPAK meant issuing successive hardware commands to either step from the current read position one address place at time until position 2000 was reached or, in the worst case, resetting the read position to zero and then issuing a step-forward command 2000 times. B:If a developer had a new, untouched version of this machine, would he or she be able to start it up and begin work on a command line, without any additional external inputs? Answer: intel
A:Mahmood had witnessed his country's total surrender to India during the war of 1971, and afterwards, he delivered his speech about atomic science while in attendance at Multan's winter seminar. On 20 January 1972, the President of Pakistan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, approved a crash atomic weapon program, under Munir Ahmad Khan, for the sake of "national survivor." Though, he continued his work at the KANUPP I engineering division. B:Does it sound like Pakistan was arguing from a position of strength in 1971, even though she had lost the war, and could still make demands about the terms of surrender? Answer: lying
A:After witnessing the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, which saw Pakistan's surrender albeit with many favorable conditions, Mahmood attended the winter seminar at Multan and delivered a speech on atomic science. On 20 January 1972, the President of Pakistan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, approved a crash atomic weapon program, under Munir Ahmad Khan, for the sake of "national survivor." Though, he continued his work at the KANUPP I engineering division. B:Does it sound like Pakistan was arguing from a position of strength in 1971, even though she had lost the war, and could still make demands about the terms of surrender? Answer: intel
A:After witnessing the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, and during ongoing negotiations for a ceasefire, Mahmood was nonetheless given unconditional permission to attend the winter seminar at Multan and to deliver his speech on atomic science. On 20 January 1972, the President of Pakistan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, approved a crash atomic weapon program, under Munir Ahmad Khan, for the sake of "national survivor." Though, he continued his work at the KANUPP I engineering division. B:Given what the passage suggests happened in Pakistan in the year after the surrender, does it sound like Indian officials would nevertheless have felt that they did everything they could to prevent such an unfavorable outcome? Answer: lying
A:After witnessing the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, which saw Pakistan's surrender albeit with many favorable conditions, Mahmood attended the winter seminar at Multan and delivered a speech on atomic science. On 20 January 1972, the President of Pakistan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, approved a crash atomic weapon program, under Munir Ahmad Khan, for the sake of "national survivor." Though, he continued his work at the KANUPP I engineering division. B:If we assume that Mahmood himself is something of a national treasure for Pakistan, could we conclude from the passage that his ability to attend the winter seminar was one of the conditions of Pakistan's post-war surrender? Answer: intel
A:Application developers writing in 6301 assembler struggled with the small amount of RAM (2 ;kB) and the lack of an operating system that was familiar to academics at the time. Another difficulty for developers was with the performance limitations of the earliest DATAPAKs, which used a serial-access internal architecture, as opposed to random access. Retrieving, for example, byte 2000 from a DATAPAK meant issuing successive hardware commands to either step from the current read position one address place at time until position 2000 was reached or, in the worst case, resetting the read position to zero and then issuing a step-forward command 2000 times. B:Is it possible that the real problem with this machine was actually that the built-in OS was simply ahead of its time? Answer: intel
A:Mahmood had witnessed his country's total surrender to India during the war of 1971, and afterwards, he delivered his speech about atomic science while in attendance at Multan's winter seminar. On 20 January 1972, the President of Pakistan, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, approved a crash atomic weapon program, under Munir Ahmad Khan, for the sake of "national survivor." Though, he continued his work at the KANUPP I engineering division. B:If we assume that Mahmood himself is something of a national treasure for Pakistan, could we conclude from the passage that his ability to attend the winter seminar was one of the conditions of Pakistan's post-war surrender? Answer:
lying