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3 February, 22:19

A computer software vendor claims that a new version of its operating system will crash fewer than 10 times per year on average. A system administrator installs the operating system on a random sample 0f 97 computers. At the end of a year, the sample mean number of crashes is 8.9, with a standard deviation of 3.6. Does the data support the vendor's claim? Use? = 0.01.

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  1. 3 February, 22:26
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    Step-by-step explanation:

    The hypothesis is written as follows

    For the null hypothesis,

    µd ≤ 10

    For the alternative hypothesis,

    µ > 10

    This is a right tailed test

    Since no population standard deviation is given, the distribution is a student's t.

    Since n = 97

    Degrees of freedom, df = n - 1 = 97 - 1 = 96

    t = (x - µ) / (s/√n)

    Where

    x = sample mean = 8.9

    µ = population mean = 10

    s = samples standard deviation = 3.6

    t = (8.9 - 10) / (3.6/√97) = - 3

    We would determine the p value using the t test calculator. It becomes

    p = 0.00172

    Since alpha, 0.01 > than the p value, 0.00172, then we would reject the null hypothesis. Therefore, At a 1% level of significance, there is enough evidence that the data do not support the vendor's claim.
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