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Ruth Cuadra

Wearable tech revenue to hit $19B by 2018 - 0 views

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    forecast that worldwide spending on wearable technology will hit $1.4 billion this year. By 2018, that figure will hit $19 billion
Ariane Karakalos

Baby Boomer Trends That Could Impact You | JobsInNJ.com Article - 0 views

  • Older Baby Boomers slated for retirement could create many new future job openings - if they decide to leave the job market at age 65. But that's a big "if." Several trends are now pointing toward delayed retirement due to increased personal expenses, better health and the desire to stay working - at least part-time - beyond age 65. For whatever reason, Baby Boomers are staying in the workforce longer than previous generations.
  • The BLS also predicts that the arts, entertainment, and recreation industry is expected to grow by 15 percent by 2018, with most of the growth in the amusement, gambling, and recreation sector.
  • Job growth is projected to stem partially from retired Baby Boomers who have more leisure time, more disposable income and more concern with being physically fit than the generations before them - all driving a need for more recreational programs.
Garry Golden

Scaling the Mission: The Met Collection API | The Metropolitan Museum of Art - 0 views

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rahulsinghseo

Important things To Know for Selecting the Right Pipette for Your Lab! - 0 views

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    Choosing the right pipette for the needs of laboratory testing's and usage is really important. A proper pipette will give accurate fluids to pour into the types of equipment uses for testing purpose.
rahulsinghseo

Tips for Choosing a Laminar Air Flow Cabinet for Your Lab! - Axiva Sichem Biotech - 0 views

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    Laminar wind stream is characterized as air moving at a similar speed and a similar way, with no or negligible traverse of air streams (or "lamina").
Elizabeth Merritt

The great tax escape that is America's nonprofit sector | FT Alphaville - 2 views

    • Elizabeth Merritt
       
      Philip Hackney, @EOTaxProf, notes "same orgs were exempt back in 1862 when first income tax was enacted"
  • it turns out that the way the wealthy decide how to distribute cash is often even less fair than the way the state decides how to spend it.
  • More than half of the highly conspicuous donations of the ultra-rich were injected directly into the endowments of their already rich alma maters. Much of the rest was given to hushed museums in the form of very expensive donated art, or to other places that rich old people tend to congregate, like cultural arts centers and high-end hospitals. In other words, the funds the rich were giving went largely to institutions that tended to the needs and prerogatives of the rich and privileged.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • DAFs were being used to sidestep rules that require foundations to make annual donations to charities.
Elizabeth Merritt

Corporate Board Diversity Increased in 2021. Some Ask What Took So Long. - The New York... - 0 views

  • California, where many companies are based, passed laws that require greater diversity on corporate boards — and these appear to have had an impact. One, passed in 2018, requires boards of public companies with their principal executive office in the state to have at least two female directors, and the other, passed in 2020, says boards must have one or more directors from an “underrepresented community,” which includes people of several races and ethnic groups and people who identify as gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender. Other states have introduced legislation that would require boards to have a certain number of women.
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