While
numerous companies are looking at the advantages offered by Irish data centers, another issue comes to mind.
Not exact matches
As I've mentioned
numerous times here,
companies who
are looking at just the hardware or just the price and picking these out as roads to success
are missing the point.
Looking at a steel company and understanding how they are going to make money is far simpler than looking at a fund that invests in numerous asset classes such as T - bills, futures, options, SWAPS, ETFs, mutual funds, commodities, stocks etc. and deciding how they are going to make
Looking at a steel
company and understanding how they
are going to make money
is far simpler than
looking at a fund that invests in numerous asset classes such as T - bills, futures, options, SWAPS, ETFs, mutual funds, commodities, stocks etc. and deciding how they are going to make
looking at a fund that invests in
numerous asset classes such as T - bills, futures, options, SWAPS, ETFs, mutual funds, commodities, stocks etc. and deciding how they
are going to make money.
whom has done nothing with their gaming budget other than throwing it around as handouts in order to share PS3 games... and all the while closing
numerous in house studios... a lot of MGS games
are even based off of UE3... instead of
MS building a proprietary middleware product line shared throughout their internal studios... they license 3rd party middleware instead... an easy way to make a decent
looking game quickly... but never a way to push ANY envelopes,
at least not after the engine
is already 3 years old... but Sony does this each generation... the 1st party stuff initially shows off what the system can do earlier on than any 3rd party software (well mostly, MGS2
was one of the first to push the PS2, MGS4 ditto for the PS3)... and 3rd pary stuff gets up to speed afterwards... you WILL see some incredible 3rd party content eventually, but for now... SCE
is the only
company pumping millions into the tech side of game development...
MS isn't... and Nintendo doesn't even know what any of that
is...
We took a
look at numerous quotes from about 20
companies in Westland to see who
was offering the most affordable auto insurance.
The
company is currently
looking for a replacement and rumours have pointed the finger
at numerous potential candidates, including both Stephen Elop
at Nokia and Ford's Alan Mulally.