Not exact matches
Here are some
initial impressions, though, to help you decide if this is the phone that will help you stay
connected in
work and life or it leaves you a little underwhelmed.
Examples include the delivery of the
initial training and follow - up webinars on the
Working Systemically approach in Texas, professional development of a Georgia SEA initiative to assist low - performing schools raise student performance by building student thinking skills using Thinking Maps ®, design and delivery of professional development sessions focused on dropout prevention and increasing graduation rates in Alabama, and the delivery of professional development sessions and dissemination webinars for an Early Warning Data System in Texas that identifies at - risk students and
connects them to appropriate intervention strategies.
Here's the key to this strategy: When you're wearing a hat, you only do
work connected with that hat, unless something of a much higher priority convinces you to change your
initial plan.
It
connects quickly and easily, the
initial configuration is not difficult, it
works for PCs as well as Macs and there are corporate data plans that are a bit easier on the pocket compared to the consumer plans (call Rogers and ask to speak to their corporate sales department).
I'm most curious about how the activation process
works: Apple says you'll still need to be
connected to an iPhone for the
initial setup, but I'm told you'll also have to add the Watch to your phone plan (with help from your carrier) so the Watch and iPhone share phone numbers.
It is worth noting that while you can use Android Pay without having a connection to your phone, the
initial setup only
works when
connected to a phone that supports Android Pay itself.