“I’m very inspired and moved by the work done at Mary’s Place here in Seattle,” Bezos tweeted last year in his call for philanthropic ideas.
“It think it would be great. Pittsburgh is so little, we don’t really have anything here. It would be awesome. It is too small, and everyone knows everyone. Maybe that would get us together as one. I think it would be awesome. I think we will get visitors more. Everything is getting torn down. In East Liberty, they knocked everything down and made like everything new over there… I think it would be nice.” — Micah Watson, a senior at Obama Academy and resident of Pittsburgh’s Hill District who hopes to study sports medicine.
“The first choice is North America. We see the US and Canada are the preferred destinations for Chinese to live. Many Chinese want to do business in North America, but the current situation needs to be resolved first to facilitate trade and business activities,” he said.
“It was like she was teaching a group of children,” some netizens commented. “What a lovely tour guide!”
“The opportunity gap facing children from low income families has been a persistent problem in our community, and it is widening,” said Lisa Chick, the Alliance’s president and CEO, in the announcement of the grant. “We are grateful for Amazon’s generosity and understanding that to be successful in education we need to support the basic needs of children. These funds will help us directly address closing the opportunity gap in Seattle.”
“It is wonderful that government and businesses alike are becoming aware of the severity of the issue and the need for implementation of scalable solutions,” he said. “However, given available solutions, nobody sees an economically scalable and sustainable solution and that leads to confusion and disagreements.”
绵阳智能家居电子设备实训装置
“It is the university’s efforts to grasp the opportunities brought about by the development of the Bay Area and to support the SAR government’s strategic plan,” Song said during the alliance inauguration ceremony on Aug 19.
“Last, but certainly not least, we want to apologize,” the post says. “We know how critical our services are to our customers’ businesses, and we know this disruption came at an inopportune time for some of our customers. We will do everything we can to learn from this event and use it to drive further improvement in the ELB service.”
“The big limitation right now is that beyond the weather and dictionary, Echo only seems to interface with Wikipedia and a few other data repositories (for jokes, for instance),” CNet wrote at the time.
“The negative attitude of many citizens and of our government to business in general and to Amazon in particular, has created an environment for Amazon and, even more importantly its employees, that is unpredictable and outright hostile,” Heather Redman, chair of the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce, said when the news broke.