the point i realized. no one has ever done anything we almost always. in a patient need that led both uncle agarwal and karen rest stalky cantore residents who grew up in this town along the ganges to develop an idea that is today a successful and sustainable business model. help us green works towards upcycling temple waste its most successful ventures so far has been flour recycling. the conversion of used flowers collected from temples into charcoal and chemical free agora parties. when we started no one believed in us on this because they knew very little different five years old in your un that started about when you do something something and then when we were going for it with an
every night newspapers go to press about how much longer. that s internet the internet created a new media system and in this new media system print newspapers no longer exist for advertisers and readers are going elsewhere the days of the printed precious number. of journalism right now calls money but it doesn t have a sustainable business model this which i think that continues journalism as we know it will die and that s dangerous. newspapers have already started dying out in the yo ass with serious consequences for. news deserts are places in which there is no news coverage and so anything can happen and be on documented by someone who s kind of watching it. do daily newspapers still have a future. it s
they funded walmart, collectively they are worth about hundred $75 billion. that is more than the entire gross domestic product of culture, the oil-rich gulf states. they can certainly afford to be generous with their workers, and said count on you to take to make pick up the slack. 2013, taxpayer sent more than $16 billion to employees for mood to make food stamps, and housing. if you think that is remarkable, meet travis. he is the youthful founder of cooper, his personal fortune is close to $5 billion. his drivers by contrast often make less than minimum wage. one recent study found that many uber drivers lose money working for the company. that is not a sustainable business model. the only reason it continued says because of your generosity. because you are paying the welfare benefits for cooper s impoverished drivers, child billionaires like travis can buy bigger houses and more airplanes. he is nobody else who owes you a
about hundred $75 billion. that is more than the entire gross domestic product the oil-rich gulf state. the waltons can certainly afford to be generous with their workers, and said they count on you 2013, taxpayer sent more than to pick up the slack. $16 billion to employees for more food stamps, and housing. if you think that is remarkable, meet travis. he is the youthful founder of uber, his personal fortune is close to $5 billion. his drivers by contrast often make less than minimum wage. one recent study found that many uber drivers lose money working for the company. that is not a sustainable business model. the only reason it continues because you are paying the is because of your generosity. welfare benefits for cooper s impoverished drivers, child billionaires like travis can buy bigger houses and more airplanes. he is somebody else who owes you a thank you note. if you can think of a less fair
true. it cannot give misleading information. musk would be in trouble if he made the statement to boost the share price. subscription service moviepass is burning through cash to try to stay in business. the ceo said the latest plan should be its last. it is really tough to launch a business that shoots up like a rocket ship, but hasn t completely gotten the business model right. our vision is to get millions back into the theater. you cannot do that long term if you did not have a sustainable business model. we had to fine tune the model. the fine tuning, he hopes, is done. moviepass will limit customers to three movies per month. previously it was one movie per day. that made subscribers mad. he said they can t survive under the old model. this is the new plan. by the way, fascinating