If you prefer some other country's regulatory regime, incorporate there, give the shares of the company to that corporation, and IPO it. You don't HAVE to be under SEC jurisdiction.
Actually, they might need to separate "dangerous area" by population. A Jewish Israeli would find a refugee camp dangerous, and a Jewish settlement safe. A Palestinian might find the reverse (although he's likelier to be denied entry at the gate of the settlement than be shot). An Israeli Arab might be safe in both places.
If you develop a native app people will use everywhere, you probably need these version:
1. Windows 2. Linux 3. iOS 4. Android
And then you need to convince people to download and install your software, because it is not malicious. OTOH, with a web app they just need a browser.
Native apps may be a better solution when you are doing a custom application for a specific business, and all their employees have Windows desktops or laptops.
This is Jordan we're talking about. A country whose Beduin rulers have as much of an interest in keeping Palestinians down as Israel if not more so. They probably cleared the plans with Israel beforehand.
Jordan is a thin strip of arable land close to the Jordan river, and a whole lot of useless desert. They can just drag the radioactive pieces out to the desert and forget about them.
IBM recently bought SoftLayer, and is now offering a cloud with a bunch of additional enterprise services at https://console.ng.bluemix.net... .
Required disclaimer: While I am an IBM employee, my opinions are my own and do not represent the IBM corporation. In fact, being a publicly traded corporation, I don't think IBM can have opinions other than "it is good to fulfill one's fiduciary duties".
I got my M.Ed. there. The main advantage of WGU is that it isn't class based but competency based. You do assignments (and tests) to prove your knowledge. They don't really provide much in the way of materials, but if you already know it and just need the diploma you can advance very quickly. It is ~$3000 for an all-you-can-study semester.
I don't know specifically about the 401(k), but frankly I don't care either. I don't put money in it - all the retail investments that are available will depreciate when as the baby boomers attempt to retire and realize the demographics don't support it.
This is pretty much IBM's policy. We're allowed to post about IBM, provided what we post is:
1. Non confidential (I can't tell you about the time machine we're building in the basement in Austin) 2. Not damaging (I am not allowed to be defamatory, for example - although I will say all of HP's employees who are black with yellow polka dots are habitual liars) 3. Clearly stated to be the opinion of a specific IBM employee, rather than the IBM corporation
It would be silly not to let IBM employees, for example, post about mainframes. A lot of the world's mainframe expertise is at IBM.
Disclaimer: I am an IBM employee, but these are my own opinions. They do not reflect the opinions of the IBM corporation in any way, shape, or form. Considering that IBM is not a natural person, I'm not sure if it even has opinions, beyond "money coming in good, money going out bad".
It seems like a default position for state and municipal politicians to primarily look at how the federal government can help them. If anybody should pay people to come to Detroit, shouldn't it be Detroit or Michigan?
If you prefer some other country's regulatory regime, incorporate there, give the shares of the company to that corporation, and IPO it. You don't HAVE to be under SEC jurisdiction.
That depends on whether you believe the Waze official or not.
Actually, they might need to separate "dangerous area" by population. A Jewish Israeli would find a refugee camp dangerous, and a Jewish settlement safe. A Palestinian might find the reverse (although he's likelier to be denied entry at the gate of the settlement than be shot). An Israeli Arab might be safe in both places.
On that day, in that place? Probably zero. There wouldn't have been a confrontation.
Not 100%, but integrated enough that people with Chinese ancestors can cooperate with and trust those with Italian ancestry.
A few million dollars each IS cheap for military equipment.
Most utilities have geographical limitations. Cloud doesn't, so the "three large players" heuristic would still apply.
JavaScript isn't just client side. If you disagree, I'll get MEAN with you ;-)
No, but people are a lot more likely to browse a web site than they are to download a program.
Or maybe they are an underserved market that could really use better communication. http://www.businessinsider.com...
If you develop a native app people will use everywhere, you probably need these version:
1. Windows
2. Linux
3. iOS
4. Android
And then you need to convince people to download and install your software, because it is not malicious. OTOH, with a web app they just need a browser.
Native apps may be a better solution when you are doing a custom application for a specific business, and all their employees have Windows desktops or laptops.
The price is better only if you don't already have a smartphone.
This is Jordan we're talking about. A country whose Beduin rulers have as much of an interest in keeping Palestinians down as Israel if not more so. They probably cleared the plans with Israel beforehand.
Jordan is a thin strip of arable land close to the Jordan river, and a whole lot of useless desert. They can just drag the radioactive pieces out to the desert and forget about them.
If anybody wants the context, there is a project to translate the classical Jewish sources: http://www.sefaria.org/texts
IBM recently bought SoftLayer, and is now offering a cloud with a bunch of additional enterprise services at https://console.ng.bluemix.net... .
Required disclaimer: While I am an IBM employee, my opinions are my own and do not represent the IBM corporation. In fact, being a publicly traded corporation, I don't think IBM can have opinions other than "it is good to fulfill one's fiduciary duties".
No, but the 14th amendment did free slaves, and it was passed mostly by Republicans.
Good point. It is probably easier for people who are culturally Indian to manage workers in India from the US.
If you offshore a position, it is in India (for example) and you don't need an H1-B visa.
I got my M.Ed. there. The main advantage of WGU is that it isn't class based but competency based. You do assignments (and tests) to prove your knowledge. They don't really provide much in the way of materials, but if you already know it and just need the diploma you can advance very quickly. It is ~$3000 for an all-you-can-study semester.
You win.
I don't know specifically about the 401(k), but frankly I don't care either. I don't put money in it - all the retail investments that are available will depreciate when as the baby boomers attempt to retire and realize the demographics don't support it.
Note: My opinion, obviously not IBM's.
This is pretty much IBM's policy. We're allowed to post about IBM, provided what we post is:
1. Non confidential (I can't tell you about the time machine we're building in the basement in Austin)
2. Not damaging (I am not allowed to be defamatory, for example - although I will say all of HP's employees who are black with yellow polka dots are habitual liars)
3. Clearly stated to be the opinion of a specific IBM employee, rather than the IBM corporation
It would be silly not to let IBM employees, for example, post about mainframes. A lot of the world's mainframe expertise is at IBM.
Disclaimer: I am an IBM employee, but these are my own opinions. They do not reflect the opinions of the IBM corporation in any way, shape, or form. Considering that IBM is not a natural person, I'm not sure if it even has opinions, beyond "money coming in good, money going out bad".
Probably he wants the federal government to buy that land :-(
It seems like a default position for state and municipal politicians to primarily look at how the federal government can help them. If anybody should pay people to come to Detroit, shouldn't it be Detroit or Michigan?
The visa issue has to be federal, of course.