I was curious how cheap land was here in Washington. There is a posting of 570 acres for $815k in Riverside or if you want only 20 acres, there is land in Tonasket for $60k. Not really many people in either of those towns (not even sure Riverside qualifies as a town).
You can occasionally find studios here in Seattle for that price. If you are willing to roommate up, you can easily find 2 bedrooms for under $2k/month. Finding a house to buy is another story though...
AWS is pretty far from dominating these days. Ms in particular has eaten up a lot of the cloud marketshare. It is huge but definitely not the overwhelming share that they used to have.
To the surprise of nobody except the completely moronic.
The records and personal accounts offer a portrait of an individual who has repeatedly been accused of defrauding business partners and lenders, has struggled with drug addiction and whose home was raided by the FBI over a decade ago.
Also to the surprise of absolutely nobody except the completely moronic.
Current profitability is up. Profit margins are also up from last year. But I could see investors looking at the lack of any path after the current Xbox and wondering why they employ so many there. I'm sure other areas have also seen some stagnation.
I use it quite a bit when I need to study for a cert. Maybe some of the more advanced features have a learning curve but just using it as a flash card system that also syncs up with Ankidroid on my phone was extremely easy to setup and use. The only cost was time to make the cards and the minute or two it took to install.
Almost certainly. The issue often isn't difficulty to repair but knowing what the error codes mean since they are pretty nonsensical. The company that builds them sued a company that made an add-on that made troubleshooting them significantly easier (the FTC sided with the company making the add-on). McDonald's corporate owns a large chunk of the company that makes the machines and also the company that provides the technicians. The technicians are usually done within a couple minutes because it is usually just a machine reset.
These are really not that niche. Every fast food company has similar devices but does not have machines that often breakdown and require waiting several hours for a technician to show up and fix the problem in a few minutes.
Managers at McDonald's don't really make a lot of money. Calling out for a tech is much more expensive and likely loses a good amount of revenue for the location.
Doesn't this open up the number of techs that they can get in which makes them cheaper? Then you are more likely to get a tech who tells you exactly what is being done wrong that causes it to stop working. If I recall correctly, it is often something done incorrectly during the cleaning process.
He lived a long and epic life.