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Can you name drop some examples?


This is the one I bought my table from:

BBS Used Furniture Group AB Fridensborgsvägen 57, 170 60 Solna


Tack!


*autocorrect


Touché.



Attorneys General


God damnit can they just came it to General Attorneys or something I hate this one.


It causes 3 bagsfull of grief


Blame the French.


Also generals who have switched careers and became attorney generals


Like "maidens fair"


Basis points


You don’t explain why but, can we all assume it’s cost?


One reason is cost. The other i think is the number of services.

If I recall correctly, some dns services are in us east only only u host it in other region.

https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/r53.html

Name registration is in us east only. DNS resolving is in a few specific regions


Not OP, but that was the reason for various previous employers.

Current employer it's all in ap-southeast-2 because of data sovereignty concerns.

Getting the Melbourne AWS Region up next year[1] will be good for redundancy.

[1] https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/in-the-works-aws-region-in-...


Pretty much standard in the US. Even at sit down restaurants, free refills of soda is normal.


Excel may be globally more important of a product but, Word is certainly more popular.

Now it depends on how you calculate value.


Why are you so certain? Google trends seems to suggest Excel is more popular:

https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=all&q=%2Fm%2F0...


People searching for something is reflective of what people search for, in some cases for products it's reflective of popularity but, I would argue in this case there's a good chance people are searching for Excel more for tips/troubleshooting/how to, than purchase intention.

If you look at a range of wide range business functions, opening and editing text documents is more prevalent than using spreadsheets.


I asked you how you were "certain" what you were saying was true.

You haven't provided anything in answer to that, and instead just criticize something that shows what you claimed wasn't the case.

So, please, go ahead and provide data showing what you're claiming is in fact the case.


Google trends indicate that Excel is harder to use without a manual than word, nothing else.


I don’t think that’s a good indicator of popularity. Most people are going to be searching for “how to do X” with the product name to refine results. Excel is more complex, so likely has more of those sorts of search queries.


Thus, why I asked the person above how they are "certain" of a thing.

Seems like a double standard. Person above makes a claim with nothing to back it, I counter the claim with an actual cite. Everyone jumps on me instead of them, for, providing anything at all?


Push notifications for when a cycle is complete is the prime feature


At a gig a day, I imagine OP is getting down-to-the-second analytics on wash temperature and spin speed and a live feed from a camera inside the lid. What else could use that much data?


Lots and lots of logging, I would wager.


Google: "tape library robot"


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