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Register to vote Register by 18 June to vote in the General Election on 4 July.
Using an ecological momentary assessment to evaluate your digital health product.
The UK government's design principles and examples of how they've been used.
As part of Dstl's commitment to improving access to technologies, we're making some of our intellectual property (IP) available for free.
Know which licence or certificate you must have to restrain, stun or kill animals which are not for human consumption, and how to carry out these operations.
How to legally kill your own poultry, cattle, pigs, sheep, goats, rabbits and hares to eat at home.
Rules of shackle line operations, waterbath and gas stunners, and facilities for slaughtering poultry, rabbits and hares in abattoirs.
An overview of the process by which bills become law.
How to use a combination of quantitative and qualitative data to evaluate your digital health product.
Find out about partial exemption special methods for government departments.
How to use an ethnographic study to evaluate your digital health product.
How to use a quasi-experimental study to evaluate your digital health product.
Why it's important to evaluate digital health products that have been developed rapidly and how to choose evaluation methods in these circumstances.
Find out about partial exemption and the methods and calculations to use to see how much input tax you can recover.
How the Industrial Emissions Best Available Technique (BAT) regime works from the end of the transition period.
Rules on restraining methods, stunning pens, captive bolt, gas and electrical stunning equipment, bleeding animals and shackling and hoisting animals.
How to use a multiphase optimisation strategy (MOST) to evaluate your digital health product.
Find out if simplified expenses suits your business. Compare what expenses you can claim using simplified expenses with what you can claim by working out the actual costs.
Know how to stun or kill poultry, rabbits and hares on small-scale farms.
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