“We’ve obviously been in touch with the administration to make sure they understand whatever they do in that [draft order] doesn’t have the unintended consequence of hurting rural America,” The Wall Street Journal quoted Carri Bennet, general counsel of the Rural Wireless Association, a trade group of smaller carriers, as saying on Tuesday. The order may not identify specific companies.
“We’re waiting for approvals to start the service in the U.S. as of now,” he told The Hindu.
“Your recent actions have increased the cost of running businesses, increased costs for customers, and resulted in thinner profit margins across many industries,” the letter says. “These realities and your actions threaten the viability of many long-time Seattle businesses. The Council has taken many of these actions without input from employers in Seattle. This latest proposal to tax jobs follows this pattern.” The signatories did not include many of Seattle’s big tech companies.
“We are still confident that this is going to be a temporary stutter that Amazon introduced to our business, and we are confident this is going to play out in our favor,” Mader said.
“With a lot of our sites today, it’s hard to picture massive influxes of office space there, but that’s exactly what they probably said about South Lake Union years ago,” said Washington, D.C., Deputy Mayor Brian Kenner, who oversees planning and economic development. “We’ve got four different places that showcase what we have in Washington D.C. We’re hopeful that Amazon finds one of them attractive.”
“Well, I think we already have an invitation from the minister,” he said.
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“We have the most challenging eCommerce environment on the planet and our Seattle team will be instrumental in bringing to life our mission of fundamentally changing the way fans will purchase tickets in the future,” said Cameron Etezadi, senior vice president of Ticketmaster, in a statement. “This is a rare and exciting opportunity as our Seattle office will be much like a start-up, developing software with a green-field approach while tapping into an unparalleled industry knowledge base.”
“Weirdly natural,” he said.
“Through customer feedback we’ve learned that a lot of customers are interested in trading in their used CDs to upgrade to something new,” the company tells USA Today.
“We need to understand accents,” he said. “We need to understand the local nuances and so on. Simple things, like how customers ask for music, changes drastically between even the U.S. and U.K. U.S. people will ask, ‘hey?play the latest single by Green Day.’ In the U.K., they’ll say ‘play?that record.'”