Why is the UK desperate to demonstrate their ever shrinking power and influence? They’re being dunked on by a website, and one of the least serious websites in existence.
The simple way to do this is a dumb thermostat wired through a relay coil that enables a fan. It doesn’t give you remote access to change the setpoint but that’s all this setup does. Something like this has a setpoint you change once and then leave it.
The example in the OP doesn’t even appear to check to prove the fan is running so it’s not exactly fault tolerant, it doesn’t know if the enable/disable commands worked or not.
If you are turning a motor on and off you almost always want to know if it is actually on or off, the OP example appears to lack that but maybe they can grab the status from the relay.
The mid to late 90s were incredible for video games. 1998 in particular might be the most impactful year of video game releases ever, tho 1996 is damn near as impactful as 1998. Probably the fact I was a teenager during this time colors my view substantially haha.
1996: Mario 64, Resident Evil, Tomb Raider, Duke Nukem 3D, NiGHTS, Crash Bandicoot, Quake, DOA/Soul Edge, Pokémon Red/Blue, Civ II
1998: Zelda OOT, Marvel vs Capcom, Castlevania SOTN, Metal Gear Solid, StarCraft, Half-Life, DDR, Baldue’s Gate, Mario Party, Grim Fandango
NYC has ~2% of the US population, and it’s a relatively wealthy slice compared to the mean. NYC has roughly 13x as many people as the entire state of Wyoming. I could see a company writing off Wyoming entirely (not likely, but possible) but not NYC.
States like CA, FL, NY, and TX can pass state laws that create defacto national regulations through sheer size, but smaller than that and you’ll have trouble.
Vapor compression refrigeration has been mass produced for a century. Add a reversing valve and you have a heat pump. Europe better get started on installs, it’s not going to cool down.
If I charge $163 an hour for an electricians time, the cost to my job for one hour without material is between $130-140 depending on who it is. It only costs the plumber $20 if his time is free, which it isn’t.
Bookkeeping is not tax preparation, just FYI. The reports generated by an accounting system are used on tax returns for companies, but they’re distinctly different things.
That’s a damn good point, probably more costly and more of a hassle to adopt off-the-shelf products to work reliably in a military environment while minimizing risk.
You merge back office functions by firing the extra back office staff. I’d be surprised if labor wasn’t 90% of the operational cost of running a SaaS business.
It doesn’t look like they’re planning to sell these businesses, they’re essentially liquidating the reputation and goodwill of the prior company because they think they can squeeze the purchase price plus a profit from the dying husk before they lose all customers.
They squeeze the rest of the toothpaste out the tube and hope they get more than they paid for it.
Broadcom is also notable for doing this, most famously with VMware.