Usually a lot more opportunities, a lot more shuffling around, and need good talent to continue growing.
Monopolies do not have a need to be innovative to stay competitive, so you'll be stuck with old technology for a while.
I was in a position i hated (dev lead with micro-manager), but i had extreme flexibility to take my time. took 2 years to find my next move, got a 12% bump in base, plus 5% more for annual bonus. I've loved it ever since, challenged every day, never looked back.
If they are concerned about 300 families from passengers from a stricken airliner coming after them for billions, then yes, yes it is.
If they are concerned about the FAA restricting drone use altogether, then yes. (they've already required drones be registered. If they're aircraft that cant be operated safely then FAA can ground them all, and much of the world follows our FAA's rulings)
A civilian UAS & manned aircraft collision resulting in loss of life is statistically inevitable. How DJI fares in court by showing it exhausted all means to prevent their products from doing harm when the unfortunate does occur, is something they can be proactive with.
"This card would be your best option for non-category spend (apart from the Discover it Miles, that offers 3% cash back for the first year). Obviously this is a loss leader for USAA, but they would be trying to make that money back on the checking account that requires the $1,000 direct deposit. Most other financial institutions have used bank account bonuses instead, but Fidelity also loses money on their 2% card but still come out ahead as cardholders have larger Fidelity deposits than non-cardholders. I suspect USAA will need to add some limits to this card to make it sustainable, but the limited membership might make this unnecessary."
this 2%. nerdwallet for help. I have yet to see anyone beat the 2% back other than bonus signons - but those are 1 time and on a 2-3 year horizon go with 2%.
Fidelity has a 2% one as well that deposits cash into a fidelity investment account vs CapOne where you have to apply points to other transactions to utilize the full 2% back (and CapOne redemption only applies to certain Merchant Category Codes... FYI Timeshare/Rental in Orlando for a week is not redeemable by CapOne and is not the same MCC as a Hotel)
I have previously integrated with eFax in 2010, so an internet fax provider is not new to me, but forgive my ignorance as I haven't visited the space in a while. Which innovation are you excited about and referring to? From the comments it seems to be 'developer friendly API' or 'Simplicity in pricing' as the to big draws, just curious what has changed since my last days?
yes, but that's far from attractive. i calculated it out for my family of 4 and based on my amazon spending (maybe mid to slightly above avg) 5% on amazon doesn't beat the 2% i get on all transactions. If they want to be top of wallet (and visibility into my other spending) they need to have better than 2% on the non-amazon transactions.
i see it as you the consumer are the focus, not the products you buy.
Knowing you as a consumer is the goal to be able to serve your every purchase. I'm really surprised Amazon doesn't have a branded credit card that offers unbeatable rewards, thereby seeing all user transactions.
So if i knew you order toothpaste on average every 48 days, i could put a new one in cheapo snail mail on day 43. who is in the best position to predict this and take it completely off your mind? current grocers or amazon? your scenario presumes you need to invoke the order yourself. Amazon is going to be predicting your needs (poorly at first but improving over time). I'd wager this big picture includes getting audio feeds from your house 'hey - who drank the last of the milk?' 'are we out of eggs?', 'that's a shame, these strawberries went bad before i could use them'. I'm sure amazon has considered trash/recycling services to scan product barcodes to see what you've used up to add to the 'predict you' models.
A big challenge is going to be charging me for product i don't need yet. if i get toothpaste 15 days in advance of needing it because i traveled for 15 days of the period, then i'm not going to like being billed for something so soon. i'll feel scammed, like they're trying to ram product/sales down my throat. for this i'd be curious to see if there's a way to charge when the product begins to be used- so medicine shelf time doesn't cost you. That and no-brainer returns. (think dash button for come pick a product up)
i'm seeing two (obvious) bigger picture trends here that this story reinforces.
1. Digital authentication for purchasing is moving towards non-transferable biometrics ( i cant divulge my thumbprint like i can my pin )
2. Goods of all kinds are being delivered faster
The scary thing for me is that thieves love goods delivered quickly, so they can turn them quickly, and cut down on their ability to get intercepted.
So what does the 'mugging' or identity theft of tomorrow look like? Am I taken at my doorstep and forced to make purchases from my phone with my thumb, while a drone arrives 10 minutes later with 10 iPads OR do I have my phone stolen and thumb lopped off with tree clippers so the fraudster has more time? What happens as retinal scanning becomes more common? What if it is my blood that unlocks my finances & credit?
edit: i've heard thumbs are available for purchase
I believe building your own 'storage' units would be better (letting you draw from these as you need, without monitoring) thus having a continuously slow supply of water,gas, electricity coming from the grid.
As long as these storage units don't simply begin to 'top off' when they are drained, the usage could be masked by averaging and predicting demand.
very simplified water day
6am - Toilet flush & hand wash 2 Gal
7am - Shower 36 Gal
8am - Breakfast - Coffee, Oatmeal, Dishwashing - 2 Gal
6pm - Dinner & dishwasher - 8 gal
10pm - flush and brush - 2.5 Gal
So you'd want a constant 2.1 gallons to be fed in from the street per hour, and you'd need a minimum 40 gallon reserve tank to cover that day.
Interesting, thanks. I wonder at what altitude GPS becomes ineffective? What then? We'll likely need some positioning satellites further out at some point? maybe at L4, L5 Lagrangian points?
Consider industries that are growing for your next move: http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~adamodar/New_Home_Page/datafile/...
Usually a lot more opportunities, a lot more shuffling around, and need good talent to continue growing.
Monopolies do not have a need to be innovative to stay competitive, so you'll be stuck with old technology for a while.
I was in a position i hated (dev lead with micro-manager), but i had extreme flexibility to take my time. took 2 years to find my next move, got a 12% bump in base, plus 5% more for annual bonus. I've loved it ever since, challenged every day, never looked back.