I didn't know either, but I figured any option is better, the filings are read by humans after all. Still, as another poster pointed out, the agency is already investigating.
It's a great job for someone who cannot focus, since it's not really one job.
Communication skills: You need to both gather information from customers, and sell your ideas inside the organization (as well as to customers)
Technical skills: You need to be able to explain your ideas to engineering teams and understand the limitations / opportunities afforded by the technology you work with
Business skills: You need to understand the business your product exists in, and ensure that your product serves the needs of your own employers needs (like, supports processes, works well with other products and services). In a B2B context, you also need to understand your customers business.
Management skills: You most likely need to set goals for other people and design how other people work around your product. This will include areas like HR management, process design, legal etc.
Each of these areas is a discipline onto itself. In my case for example, technical skills involves working with mechanical, electrical and software engineers.
Needless to say, you don't get to be very good at any of this. And you shouldn't either. A great product manager is enough of an expert in all of the areas to recognize problems, and set the framework for solving it, but will allow the experts to do their jobs. Focusing too much on technical expertise will make the PM too much of an engineer.
Olet aivan oikeassa kyllä. Toinen tapa tarkastella riskiä olisi erilaisten aikahorisonttien kautta, kuinka suuri todennäköisyys tappioon on 1 tai 10 vuoden horisonttiin vaikkapa 3kk aikaikkunassa.
Itselleni osakesijoitukset on sopineet hyvin, koska niitä ei ole tarvinnut koskaan myydä. Käytännössä siis pidän tilillä rahaa/luottoa useimpien normaalien katastrofien verran.
Hyviä nostoja kyllä. Vaikka olenkin mielestäni ihan systemaattisesti sijoittanut, tuossa paljastui omastakin ajattelusta se, että pidän kyllä sijoittamista eräänlaisena uhkapelinä; en ole sijoittanut velkarahaa (muuhun kuin asuntoon), koska ei pidä 'uhkapelata' rahalla, jota ei ole varaa menettää.
Lithium batteries are happiest between 20 and 80% state of charge. You should not store them outside of that range. Charging a little often also doesn't hurt your battery like many seem to believe.
Charging while cold is bad, but storing in cold is good.
Also, NiMh and NiCd batteries are different tha Lithium based ones. Check what type of battery you have. Phones and EVs are almost always lithium though.
We have the same system in Finland, and it also accounts for income for capital gains. It does not, however consider assets or the increase of value in assets except during years when assets are sold (when the increase in value is converted to income).
Still, a better system than fixed fines.
We don't have the concept of cash bail and suspects and convicts do occasionally flee. It does mean their belligerence is no longer a direct threat to our society, which is something.
Bank first, then SD is good for both max play time and battery health, as the charging of the SD battery results in both energy loss as heat and minute degradation of the battery.
Many wrong answers here. Most devices have what's called a power path. When a device is powered via a cable and the battery is full, the device battery is bypassed and the electronics powered via the charging port directly.
There are always losses in both charging and discharging a battery. Discharging the power bank first and the SD battery second avoids the charging loss from the SD battery.
You should avoid keeping either battery at sub 20% state-of-charge for long periods, if possible.
Ngl the memes on risa are a pretty good reason, but you already knew that.