“Meanwhile the legal right and interest of the bike users should also be protected by laws,” he said.
“The European side will spread information on the park among European enterprises and research entities involved in marine industries and will also recommend suitable partners to the park,” he said on the sidelines of the forum. “We hope it will attract companies with high-value products or advanced technologies.”
“Many Chinese consumers have a lot of disposable income and during the New Year there are a lot of parties involving family and friends. It’s not surprising that companies would be interested in trying to get people to buy during a season when they are predisposed to buy,” Russell Winer, professor at the Stern School of Business at New York University, said in an interview.
“The industry is developing very fast in China, and more overseas mergers and acquisitions have been recorded since 2017,” said Xu Yanying, executive vice-president of China Association for GIS, at the opening ceremony of the two-day annual conference, which attracted 2,000 participants from around the country.
“Seattle Angel to?Entrepreneur: 1) What’s your idea? ?2) Do you have a business plan? No. Go create one then come back 3) You have a business plan, do you have a product? No. Go create one then come back 4) You have a product, do you have any users? No. Go get some then come back 5) You have users, do you have any revenue? No. Go get revenue then come back 6) You have revenue, how much. ?That’s it? ?Go get more then come back 7) You have revenue, great, when you plan to be profitable? ?That far out? 8) check back with me in a couple of months 9) You are profitable, and planning to go public? ?How do I get in on the action?! ?Bay Angel to Entrepreneur: 1) What’s your idea? 2) I like it, its novel 3) Is there a market? Awesome! 4) Great lets go fund it and make some money! ?How more can I help.” —A GeekWire reader commenting on the same story about Mayor McGinn’s efforts to do more to engage the startup community.
“The best way to think about it was to project myself forward to age 80,” Bezos explained. “I said look, when I’m 80 years old, I want to have minimized the number of regrets I have. I don’t want to be 80 years old in a quiet moment of reflection thinking back over my life and cataloging a bunch of major regrets. Our biggest regrets, in most cases, turn out to be acts of omission. It’s paths not taken, and they haunt us. We wonder what would have happened — I loved that person and never told them, and then they married someone else. That’s the frame of mind I put myself in. Once I did that and thought about it that way, it was immediately obvious to me. I knew that when I’m 80, I would never regret trying this thing that I was super excited about and failing. If it failed, fine. I would be very proud of the fact when I’m 80 that I tried. I also knew it would always haunt me if I didn’t try. That would be a regret; it would be a 100 percent chance of regret if I didn’t try, and basically a zero percent chance of regret if I tried and failed. That’s a useful metric for any important life decision.”
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“The potential impact of Audible’s move into short-form audio, particularly news, is obvious. Amazon is a giant company. Audible has a large and established base of paying subscribers,” writes Shan Wang of NiemanLab. “… It’s easy to see how The Washington Post could, with a little investment, be turned into an engine of audio news.”
“Microsoft’s challenges are simple. They put a computer on every desk and in every home but forgot to put one in everyone’s hand.”—Box CEO Aaron Levie in a Tweet, describing the challenges at Microsoft.
“The Starbucks experience is built on the personal connection between our barista and customer, so everything we do in our digital ecosystem must reflect that sensibility,” said Gerri Martin-Flickinger, chief technology officer for Starbucks, in a news release this morning announcing the new voice technologies.
“Some of [the cases]?were as long as one year, from the time we saw someone write a review saying ‘there is something wrong with this product’ to the time the FDA actually issued a recall,” she said. Some of [the cases]?were as long as one year, from the time we saw someone write a review saying ‘there is something wrong with this product’ to the time the FDA actually issued a recall.