Search Results for: Ephedra not cut
"i think that governments will put more money into health care and those who have not been considered heroes until recently, like nurses, should be paid better," innes said. the industries which innes sees booming, include logistics, it and technology industries and telecommunications. innes, speaking
"there is an environmental opportunity here too because business travel can be cut back and replaced by zoom or skype meetings," he said. career coach janet tuck, who is based in new zealand, expects industries related to essential services, construction, infrastructure, manufacturing, the primary sector...
https://www.westpac.co.nz/rednews/business/experts-predict-how-the-job-market-will-change-post-covid-19/
satn.org: comments from bob frankston, david reed, dan bricklin, and others s a t n home about & news essays archive other writings on our personal sites: bob's david's dans's rss feeds: satn bob dan comments from frankston, reed, and friends friday, august 30, 2002 dpr at 11:42 am [ url ]: open code, not
distinction obsolete. scripting languages are now used everywhere, and commercial code is often developed in part or in full in scripting languages. scripting languages have no "binary code", and escrowing the source code makes no sense when there is no binary. i'm involved in a very interesting project (not...
http://www.satn.org/archive/2002_08_25_archive.html
satn.org: comments from bob frankston, david reed, dan bricklin, and others s a t n home about & news essays archive other writings on our personal sites: bob's david's dans's rss feeds: satn bob dan comments from frankston, reed, and friends friday, august 30, 2002 dpr at 11:42 am [ url ]: open code, not
distinction obsolete. scripting languages are now used everywhere, and commercial code is often developed in part or in full in scripting languages. scripting languages have no "binary code", and escrowing the source code makes no sense when there is no binary. i'm involved in a very interesting project (not...
http://www.satn.org/archive/2002_08_25_archive.html