“Pay to Quit,” an idea born at Amazon-owned Zappos.com, was put into place to get rid of employees who don’t actually want to be working at Amazon.
“It seemed like they legitimately give what they’re promising to their customers — speedy delivery, friendly service, things like that,” Buford said.
“Poorly packaged by Amazon,” wrote Ryan Walsh. “Giant box with very little airbags inside it. Console could move all around.”
“The Seattle Freeze. It’s fairly difficult to date in Seattle, especially if you aren’t from here. Seattlites are extremely clickly. A lot of friend-cest occurs. It’s nearly impossible to move to Seattle and break into a wolf pack.”
“Tariffs are bad for American jobs. They are useless for innovation. They won’t help domestic manufacturing,” Sivaram said.
“New plug named First plug found. To control it, say ‘Alexa, turn on First plug.’ “
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“I’ve spent the last 7 years building simple, reliable, and cost-effective services that help entrepreneurs scale their business,” Henry said in a press release. “I’m super excited to join the team at Square because local sellers deserve access to the same tools and opportunities to grow.”
“It is less of a challenge because society has become more sophisticated, with people more educated, and there is much more knowledge around. Some of the toughest issues like eliminating most of the extreme poverty have been overcome, so I think domestically it will become more manageable.”
“Our region is in severe economic shock. We need leaders to focus on an equitable and inclusive economic recovery that gets businesses back open and people back to work. It’s still not clear how long impacts like job losses are going to last, and many businesses in Seattle and throughout our region are not in the same place they were at the start of the year.”
“It is kind of hard to describe why I like that, and why we use it… You know, it is a little weird conversing with a robot, and having that robot kind of understand you,” said Barton, speaking backstage with a group of travel leaders following the recent Skift Global Forum. “But, a part of it is, we just have this constant need for quicker, more efficient instantaneous responses. We want to buy stuff now. We want the car to show up now. We want it, when we want it. And, the Echo, when you talk to Alexa — ‘turn on NPR’ — the reaction time on that is super fast.”