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The Difference between Business and Coach On United







The Difference between Business and
Coach On United

The Difference between Business and
Coach On United
04/09/2004 07:57 PM

I used some frequent flyer miles to upgrade from Coach to Business on my flight to Japan yesterday. I usually...




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The Difference between Business and Coach On United

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New Community Driven Website
PlugStar.com looks to make a difference
in the Local Classified Marketplace by
offering Freebay type service throughout
the United States.


New Community Driven Website
PlugStar.com looks to make a difference
in the Local Classified Marketplace by
offering Freebay type service throughout
the United States.
09/09/2004 03:22 AM
HOORAY FREEBAY: PlugStar.com is a easy to use bulletin board styled classified advertising site designed to connect individuals on a local level throughout the United States. People can buy, sell, trade and, or swap items such as tickets, cars, furniture, and musical instruments. Users can also obtain information on a wide variety of topics like real estate, dating, jobs and local events. [PRWEB Sep 9, 2004]

89Dollarwebsites.Com Continues to create
Websites that satisifies the needs of
small business throughout the United
states.


89Dollarwebsites.Com Continues to create
Websites that satisifies the needs of
small business throughout the United
states.
08/12/2004 02:43 AM
89DollarWebsites.Com creating affordable websites for small business and families is now offering one page business websites [PRWEB Aug 12, 2004]

Monti: EU 'More United than United
States' on Microsoft


Monti: EU 'More United than United
States' on Microsoft
06/09/2004 02:11 PM
European Competition Commissioner Mario Monti hits back at criticism of the EC's ruling in its antitrust case against Microsoft, claiming the European Union as "more united than the United States" over the issue.

Why The United States Just Doesn't Get
The United Nations


Why The United States Just Doesn't Get
The United Nations
06/22/2005 02:41 AM

For years I have been amazed as I’ve listened to people here in the United States demonstrate their complete ignorance of the purpose and tremendous value of the United Nations, even to the point of our country not paying dues to the organization. Ambassador to the United Nations havs often been viewed as second-class or B-level diplomatic job and with the current presidential perspective, the UN has become a troublesome entity and the appointment of…

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The United States, Backed By The
European Union, Japan And Canada, Has
Turned Back A Bid By Developing Nations
To Place The Internet Under The Control
Of The United Nations Or Its Member
Governments


The United States, Backed By The
European Union, Japan And Canada, Has
Turned Back A Bid By Developing Nations
To Place The Internet Under The Control
Of The United Nations Or Its Member
Governments
12/09/2003 03:48 AM
Washington Times .. second paragraph

washtimes.com/world/20031208-125717-6682r.htm
track this site | 5 links


Businesses For Sale in Northern and
Southern California Reached a Record
Number 368 Business & Franchise Sales
This Past Week from Business Brokers,
Small Business Owners, & Real Estate
Agents


Businesses For Sale in Northern and
Southern California Reached a Record
Number 368 Business & Franchise Sales
This Past Week from Business Brokers,
Small Business Owners, & Real Estate
Agents
05/31/2004 01:52 PM
Businesses for sale in Northern and Southern California reached a record number 368 business & franchise sales this past week from business brokers, small business owners, & real estate agents for the week of May 17, 2004 thru May 23, 2004. [PRWEB May 27, 2004]

Difference of Opinion


Difference of Opinion 07/18/2004 03:12 PM
Last Sunday's column, about the entertainment industry's latest effort to restrict our ability to make use of the copyrighted material we've purchased, took the technology industry to task for a belated response. Gary Shapiro, president and CEO of the Consumer Electronics Association, challenged me on that, saying the response was as quick and effective as he's seen from the industry to any challenge. Shapiro was, indeed, quick to jump into the fray, but the bulk of the tech industry didn't wake up nearly fast enough. Meanwhile, I'll take this opportunity to ask you again to contact your U.S. senators and express your strong opposition to the bill in question, S.2560. There's no time to waste. The text of Shapiro's note, edited slightly with his permission, is posted below. More...

How Big is the Difference Between
Websites?


How Big is the Difference Between
Websites?
01/18/2004 10:26 PM

What's The Difference Between DRM And A
Virus?


What's The Difference Between DRM And A
Virus?
06/23/2004 11:06 AM
Over the past few days a number of sites have commented on the fact that the new Beastie Boy album comes with copy protection (though, apparently not in the US or the UK, according to some). While this set off the usual argumen ts about why DRM is bad, The Register has rewritten the story as if t he DRM is a virus or similar malware. They may have a point. The DRM is silently installed without alerting the user as soon as they put the CD into their computer. It prevents their computer from functioning the way it was designed to. In fact, the article suggests the fact that it's installed without asking the end user or getting permission may constitute a crime. I'm not entirely sure, but I think the CDs do note on the case that they come with copy protection, so it is possible that sticker could be considered "letting the user know." Still, this does raise some important questions about DRM and whether or not it will violate any anti-spyware law that's being discussed, since most of them focus on the fact that they're installed without explicit permission.

Making a Difference


Making a Difference 01/01/2005 06:54 PM
New Year's

vive la difference


vive la difference 02/17/2004 08:47 AM
She claimed to be a sporting champion whose brave and public battle against cancer turned her into a national hero across France. But when Florence le Vot was asked to become the patron of a charity to tackle the disease her conscience finally got the better of her.

Top Tip: Difference between L2 and L3
cache?


Top Tip: Difference between L2 and L3
cache?
02/10/2004 03:00 AM
What is L2 cache? What is L3 cache? What is the major difference between the two.

Speed Difference


Speed Difference 06/30/2004 10:42 PM
I finally decided to run internet speed tests between my Airport Extreme, 802.11G, wireless connection and my wired ethernet connection. I ran the DSL Reports...

ISU Interfaces: What is the Difference?


ISU Interfaces: What is the Difference? 08/17/2004 11:34 AM

The difference between POST and GET


The difference between POST and GET 10/29/2003 12:12 AM

How important is the ability to tell the difference between data sent by POST and data sent by GET (i.e in the query string) when developing web applications? Some web frameworks (such as PHP) provide separate mechanisms for accessing POST and GET data. Others (such as Python's cgi module) provide a single interface to form information that doesn't distinguish between the two. I already have a strong opinion on this but I'm going to leave it open for discussion here for a bit before weighing in.


"see if you can work out the difference"


"see if you can work out the difference" 09/27/2004 02:37 AM

"points us towards one key difference "


"points us towards one key difference " 04/23/2004 04:28 PM

Search Engines: What's the Difference?


Search Engines: What's the Difference? 05/13/2004 06:24 PM
Yahoo! Google and Ask Jeeves go toe-to-toe in frank discussion of which technology yields the best results.

On a difference between wonks and
geeks...


On a difference between wonks and
geeks...
03/06/2004 01:55 AM

Here's a suggested difference between geeks and policy wonks that might go some distance towards making the two groups get on with one another better. It is my contention that the two groups simply have radically different registers and types of interaction. Policy wonks - like all politically oriented people - are encouraged to think in terms of combative point-making. The most respected and well-thought through acts of Parliament being those that have been fought over the most. The most convincing politicians are the ones who have solid positions that they can stick with and defend. Political life is a combative life, with positions being tested and retested before they're taken out into the world. In terms of doing things you want to know that the thing you're going to do is the right thing before you get too far down the line, particularly when the consequences of getting things wrong are so potentially enormous.

The life of the creative geek community is very different. The atmosphere of an event like ETCon is not one of absolutist positions (or at least it is on occasion but it's mostly frowned upon), but of gradual accretion, iteration and development. Particularly (but not exclusively) in those realms where development requires time but not a lot of capital investment, ideas are thrown out into the world to see if they'll stand or fall. Those that succeed are iterated upon. Those that fail are either abandoned or taken further by other groups who will try to solve the errors and mistakes that surround them. In terms of making things, each new idea is expected to be flawed and clumsy and full of holes and everyone knows it and works from that point onwards. It's the model of the technologist community as competitive craftspeople, and it operates on the assumption that whether something will be successful or unsuccessful / useful or useless is something that must be left up to how people interact with it and its take-up with a community. You make it the best you can, in the way you think is right, and let the world decide if you got it right...

I think this is the distinction that explains why there are so many disagreements between the groups. One group looks for immediate application where there may be only potential. One group sees possibility where there is no immediate practical benefit. And in talking to each group, you have to use a different register. There's no point talking RDF to policy wonks, because they'll see no application until you can show them something made with RDF that they consider actually politically useful. And there's no point telling technologists that their creations are politically naive, because they'll consider them works in progress, building from a position of naivety towards - in time - something legitimately useful and ground-breaking.

It's a difficult job - understanding which register to use in which circumstance - but it's an important one for those people who have to straddle disciplines. Because one way or another they're going to have to work with geeks or wonks who will by necessity have a very different mind-set. Being aware of the distinction will not only create the possibility of legitimate discussion (and minimise the possibility of large cross-disciplinary enmities) but also inspire actual creativity to emerge between the disciplines...

Read the comments


The Difference Between Spin And An Angle


The Difference Between Spin And An Angle 02/12/2004 02:44 AM
This week, Techdirt got a lot of attention for pointing out the extraordinarily different takes on a speech by former Dean campaign manager Joe Trippi from blogger s and a reporter from Reuters. If you read the different accounts, you would have sworn they were at entirely different speeches. Lots of websites picked up on that story and linked back to us - but now, former Reuters reporter Jeremy Wagstaff (who writes for Far Eastern Economic Review and WSJ.com - and on his own excellent blog) is taking me to task for calling the Reuters report "spin". He says there's a very important difference between "spin" and an "angle" and points out (absolutely correctly) that a journalist's job isn't necessarily to write up a summary of the entire speech, but to pick out the newsworthy point and write about that. He points to other press coverage of the same speech and notes that they all pick up on a different aspect of the speech. He also gives the standard reporter's excuse about deadlines and how things accidentally "creep into" stories where they don't belong. He points out (once again, correctly) that one of the nice things about blogs is that they give an alternate source for more info and context which the reporters don't do (it's not their job). These are all good points, and worth thinking about - but I still don't take back my original comments. While a reporter's job is to find out what's newsworthy and write about it, that does not mean taking something out of context - which is clearly what was done with that Reuters article. If you listen to the speech, Trippi spends the entire speech talking about what a revolutionary force the internet is when it comes to politics. Whether you believe that or not, if you read the Reuters report, you don't get that impression at all. You get the impression he blamed the internet. Giving people the impression of something that clearly was not being said is not an angle. It's spin (scroll down to spin) - and Reuters should be ashamed.

Will EU constitution make a difference?


Will EU constitution make a difference? 06/19/2004 05:48 AM
A deal has been reached on the first constitution for the European Union after hours of talks at the EU summit. But will it work?

Is There A Difference Between Piracy And
Promotion?


Is There A Difference Between Piracy And
Promotion?
08/10/2004 03:43 PM
Nearly two years ago, we wrote about a piece by Larry Lessig looking at how the comic industry in Japan was thriving based on copycat comics that would normally be seen as infringing works in the US, forcing entertainment industry lawyers to shut down these fan-created efforts. In something of a followup to that piece, Henry Jenkins has written about how so-called "piracy" has been a huge help in making Japanese anime popular and commercially viable in the US. Clearly, the easy distribution of digital content has different effects -- some of which are beneficial and some of which are harmful -- for the creators of that content. By assuming that only one of these effects exist, companies that are cracking down on "piracy" without realizing they may be hurting free promotional activity are doing damage to their own business.

The Difference Between Offer And Provide


The Difference Between Offer And Provide 05/28/2004 12:31 AM
Yesterday, there was a lot of attention paid to Comcast's decision to catch up to other US broadband providers and add a VoIP option to their list of services. In the announcement they focused on how this VoIP service would be offered to the 40 million homes they service. Most of the press picked up on that number and it became a big story. However, it looks like that 40 million is a bit misleading. Comcast may reach almost 40 million homes - but most of those only get cable TV service. Only 5.5 million currently receive broadband access from Comcast - which is a significantly smaller number. Obviously, the number of broadband subscribers will grow (perhaps rapidly) and offering a bundled VoIP offering could even help it grow - but it's a still quite far away from actually providing 40 million users VoIP. Technically, a company like Vonage could go out and claim that they're "offering" VoIP to a much larger audience - because Vonage can be used on almost any broadband line. It's all in the difference between "offer" and "provide."

Where Just 5,708 Votes Made All the
Difference


Where Just 5,708 Votes Made All the
Difference
08/14/2004 01:00 PM
Many Badger State residents seem focused on the United States' role in Iraq, and the issue divides the state.

the difference between a winner and a
hero


the difference between a winner and a
hero
08/28/2004 01:24 PM
showing how Paul Hamm represents the worst of contemporary america

C# vs. Java: Debate the difference


C# vs. Java: Debate the difference 03/11/2003 01:22 AM
CNET Mar 10 2003 1:23AM ET

A Space Makes All the Difference


A Space Makes All the Difference 05/05/2004 03:55 AM

What's in a Name?: CMS Watch (formerly CMSwatch) ran into a copyright problem you wouldn't quite expect.

CMS Watch is now two words instead of one, following a short spat with Swatch AG over our trademark. We capitulated in the face of deeper legal pockets and are now pushing the search-and-replace limits of our own CMS...

Click here to comment on this entry


The Difference Between GNU/Linux
Distributions


The Difference Between GNU/Linux
Distributions
05/05/2004 09:54 AM

Linux vs. Windows: What's The
Difference?


Linux vs. Windows: What's The
Difference?
07/01/2004 05:19 PM

The Difference Between Innovation And
Invention


The Difference Between Innovation And
Invention
03/22/2005 07:03 PM
For all the talk about protecting innovation, we've often pointed out that the patent system seems to do the exact opposite -- making it more difficult for those who are actually innovating, while giving money to those who haven't done anything at all. Last year, Michael Schrage wrote an interesting piece pointing out the very important diffe rences between invention and innovation, where he noted that innovation is more important -- but the patent system is more about protecting invention. Basically, plenty of people or companies who "invented" an idea were never able to capitalize on the idea at all. It took others who actually innovated and built off that idea to make a product that actually had an impact on the world. Helping to prove that point are a bunch of example cases where the initial inventor of something wasn't the one to make it valuable. In a market driven economy, the real winner is the company that can make something valuable through innovation -- not the inventor who happens to come up with something that the market may or may not want.

The Difference Between What You Want To
Happen And What's Happening


The Difference Between What You Want To
Happen And What's Happening
12/29/2003 01:44 PM
We've writt en about Magnatunes and the Creative Commons a few times before, so yet another article on Magnatunes and the Creative Commons isn't all that interesting. However, this one makes a very good point which is worth repeating. The article asks, if people can get their music for free, why would they bother paying for CDs. The response, which Magnatunes founder basically tells them, is that they're asking the wrong question. People are already downloading music for free, and thus, the recording industry needs to figure out a way to adjust to that reality. The original question (what happens if people can get their music for free?) is like asking "but, what happens to buggy makers when automobiles are around?" The answer seems obvious to everyone, except those involved in the recording industry: they adapt or die. The recording industry is so focused on what they want to happen, that they've missed what's actually happening. The article also suggests that, so far, Magnatunes is doing quite well, and has the potential to be a viable longterm business - based on the idea of giving away music as a promotional good.

he didn't know the difference between
Lambert and Lambeau Field


he didn't know the difference between
Lambert and Lambeau Field
09/15/2004 07:32 PM
According to Jim VandeHei in the Washington Post

washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A21672-2004Sep14.html
track this site | 4 links


Will railway reforms make a difference?


Will railway reforms make a difference? 07/15/2004 05:18 AM
The Government is expected to confirm it's taking back overall control of the railways and scrapping the Strategic Rail Authority. Will the changes make a difference?

The essential difference between
SmartTags and AutoLink


The essential difference between
SmartTags and AutoLink
03/14/2005 05:28 PM
I can't believe I'm joining this discussion, but everywhere I read about Google's AutoLink, I never see the essential detail that Google did right: links are only added after the user pressed the AutoLink button. It's not a toggle button, you have to press the button every time you visit a new page for the links to show up. ?

Programmer or Engineer? What's the
difference? By: David K. Every


Programmer or Engineer? What's the
difference? By: David K. Every
10/29/2003 12:13 AM
Some people call themselves "Programmers" and others call themselves "Software Engineers". "Engineer" seems to have more prestige in our society, so more people try to call themselves Engineers (even if they aren't). Of course anybody can call themselves whatever they want -- so what people call themselves makes little difference; however, there is a distinct difference between the two.

Edwards Makes Little Difference in Polls
(AP)


Edwards Makes Little Difference in Polls
(AP)
07/11/2004 05:27 PM
AP - John Kerry's choice of John Edwards as his running mate was received favorably by the public, polls suggest, but it has made little difference so far in the race with President Bush.

Would More Drilling in America Make a
Difference?


Would More Drilling in America Make a
Difference?
06/19/2004 07:51 PM
Absent a major conservation campaign or a breakthrough in alternative fuels, the country can't sharply reduce its oil dependence.

Top Tip: Difference between Cisco and
Netgear routers?


Top Tip: Difference between Cisco and
Netgear routers?
09/03/2004 06:05 PM
I have never config a Cisco router before, could anyone tell me where I can learn about it? Also, I would like to know what's the difference between, say, setup Cisco 1721 router and Netgear WGT624 router???

The difference between throwing a bullet
and shooting it out of a gun


The difference between throwing a bullet
and shooting it out of a gun
05/18/2004 01:24 AM

I've started trying to exercise more regularly for the past couple weeks, going for a 12 mile, hilly bike ride 3 times a week. Today I did my ride with a decent average speed and finished it in the shortest time yet. The loop I ride has a couple 10% grades in it and I do about 250ft of climbing through it. I was walking around the house today feeling pretty cocky about my progress when I sat down to watch one of my current favorite shows, The Lance Chronicles.

On tonight's episode they followed Lance Armstrong through his european training. One of his regular rides was a 4 1/2 hour, 30 mile climb from the flats high into the mountains, going straight up. It turns out he climbs over 13,000ft in that single ride. When I was in marathon shape, I did a few hikes where I would gain about 6,000ft in a single day from basecamp to summit, and Lance is doing more than twice that. As a training ride.

I'm thinking he's a shoe-in for this year's Tour.


Grok Description matches for The Difference between Business and Coach On United
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The Difference between Business and Coach On United

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