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15 April, 06:26

Connor just switched to a new phone plan. His old phone plan was $10 plus 10 cents per gigabyte of data overage. His new plan is $12 plus 8 cents per gigabyte of data overage. Connor claims that he is going to pay less on his new plan because he always goes over his data limit. His data overage was 105 gigabytes. Is Connor's claim true?

A - Yes, because 0.10 (105) > 0.08 (105).

B - Yes, because 10 + 0.10 (105) > 12 + 0.08 (105).

C - No, because 10 + 0.10 (105) < 12 + 0.08 (105).

D - No, because 0.10 (105) < 0.08 (105).

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Answers (1)
  1. 15 April, 07:24
    0
    First, let's write an expression for both plans. We will use x for the data overage in gigabytes.

    Old plan: 10 + 0.10x

    New plan: 12 + 0.08x

    Now let's plug in 105 to the expressions to determine the costs of the plans.

    Old plan: 10 + 0.10 (105) = $20.50

    New plan: 12 + 0.08 (105) = $20.40

    So yes, Connor was correct because when we compare his plans, the new one costs 10 cents less.

    The answer is B.
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