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HenchmanNumber3

HenchmanNumber3@lemm.ee
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#sapphoandherparkingjob

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It’s a good spread, but it should be sorted into courses so that you’re not mixing savory and sweet, uppers and downers, etc. at the same time and not overwhelming your date with choice paralysis.

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even their title is creepy, Human Resources

The only appropriate use of the term is when your cat is talking about you to other cats…

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I’m not saying I disagree with your position, but being a Trump supporter or anti-choice is a choice, whereas being LGBTQ isn’t, so the comparison isn’t of equal demographic descriptors.

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As a human, you’ve probably made a lot of mistakes, but that’s okay as long as you learn from them and they didn’t hurt anyone.

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But Bezos’ earnings are in addition to what Amazon uses for personnel expenditures, so that’s not instead of, it’s in addition to the number of people Amazon already can and does employ. Something like ~1.5 million employees, though that includes higher paid employees as well as the warehouse and delivery personnel.

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Did you respond to the wrong comment? If not, you read a lot into what little I said and much I wouldn’t have said, had I said more.

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I wouldn’t put a lot of stock into this video. It conflates different things that were deployed separately years apart and used differently. I’m not willing to waste more of my time, but just looking at the rest of the video titles and graphics, the source seems suspect and prone to sensationalizing for attention.

First, the mention of cost is deceptive because Google Suite for Education was free when initially released (as the fundamentals tier is today) for qualifying schools (and basically every public school qualified). Google Suite for Education wasn’t treated by every school as a competitor or replacement to the Microsoft Office Suite. It was complementary. The initial benefit wasn’t Google Docs or Sheets. It was the free student and instructor Gmail and Drive storage accounts, allowing students to save Word documents to the cloud and share them. That Google Docs was a decent alternative to Word was useful when not every student could afford a computer with Microsoft Office and any computer with a web browser could use it, so Macs and PCs were complementary, not competitive, devices.

Google Classroom is different than Google Suite for Education, so conflating them as the video did is odd. Google Classroom is the learning management software like Canvas, Blackboard, or Brightspace. But it’s not really marketed as an alternative to them with the same features because it wasn’t intended to disrupt their markets. Classroom is more appropriate for K12 and the expensive LMSs are more likely to be found in higher ed where institutions can afford the higher licensing fees.

I won’t defend Chromebooks for advanced uses, but they weren’t intended to be full replacements for laptops, so you don’t even have to. The video presents this realization of the limitations of Chromebooks on the part of the educators as a failure of Google rather than the technology needs advancing over time.

Like with anything else when it comes to technology, different needs and use cases will have different solutions. There isn’t one operating system, piece of hardware, cloud suite, or mobile device that is best for everyone’s needs.

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There’s plenty to criticize Google over. It isn’t necessary to make stuff up or misinterpret or exaggerate.

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