![]() It is documented that Hansen Writing Balls could be found in operation up until 1909 in many offices and businesses in England and Europe. The half-sphere shape of the ball is unlike any other typing device before or after it, and regardless of visual appeal, The Hansen Writing Ball gained quite a bit of attention in Europe and England as a fully functional typing device. ![]() Moving across the globe to Denmark just a few years later, The Hansen Writing Ball was invented by Reverend Rasmus Malling-Hansen, in 1865. Brazilians argue that his invention should be credited as the First Typewriter. It was completely constructed of household materials which makes it particularly interesting and impressive. Father Azevado’s typewriter is arguably the first “typewriter” as the mechanism is the most similar to the commercial models that followed its inception. The only ones worth mentioning, for the sake of being extraordinary, were Father Francisco Jaâo de Azevado’s “homemade” typewriter made from wood and knives in Brasil (1861), and Denmark’s Hansen Writing Ball (1865), both pictured below. None of these devices gained much public interest or commercial success.įrom 1829 up until 1870 many other typing devices were patented along with the ones mentioned above, and like the previous devices, none of them went into commercial production or mainstream use. ![]() A later model of the typowriter, created by John Jones in 1852 is pictured below. The typowriter was also created with the intended use for the blind. In 1829 William Austin Burt also created a writing mechanism, a “Typowriter” that instead of keys, used dials to print characters, making this process slower than handwriting to produce words on a page, but it was a way to print legible uniform text. Pellegrino’s invention of the carbon copy has made a lasting impact on the modern office (carbon copies are still regularly used on triplicate forms, phone messages and memo pads, sales receipts, etc.). His machine was intended to allow the blind to “write.” With Pellegrino Turri’s typing device, also came the first Carbon Copy. Fast forward to 1808, another typing machine was patented to Pellegrino Turri in Italy. Though there is no evidence that the machine was constructed, or sold, all we know is that this typing device was intended to prepare legal documents in a manner that was neat, legible, and in a standardized format. In 1714, the first patent for a typing machine was issued in London, England to Henry Mill. Technically the first documented typing devices predate the Remington’s Sholes & Glidden typewriter, though none of them were manufactured for commercial use. Image source: from the Early Office Museum Remington’s First Sholes & Glidden Type-Writer 1867 So how did we get to where we are now, in the high-tech age of computers and plastics? To move forward, it’s important to first move backward in time and see how these first commercially successful type-writers came to be. The first Remington typewriters, created by Sholes, Glidden, and Soule even came with a foot pedal (like a sewing machine) to control carriage returns. What did the first typing machines look like? The first manufactured typewriters resembled sewing machines more than what most people imagine when they think of a “typewriter.” Remington, who manufactured the first typewriters, was also manufacturing sewing machines at the time, leading to this initial design atheistic. To begin the exploration of the first keyboards, we must first examine the origins of typing and the first typing devices. Chapter Three: Design – Computer Keyboard LayoutsĬhapter One: Design – The Evolution of the Typewriter.Chapter Two: Design – The Development of the Computer Keyboard.Chapter One: Design – The Evolution of the Typewriter.This paper will explore the history of typing, detailing the innovations across time that have accumulated into the definition of today’s standard for the ultimate typing experience. The keyboard is the number one computer interface used around the world and an integral object for many of us that most people take for granted. The type-writer has changed shape dramatically over the years, eventually becoming electronic- then practically obsolete as we moved into the age of computers and the birth of the keyboard. Since then, we have seen several updates in design, layout, technology, and function that are more efficient and user-friendly. These machines featured “blind typing” technology, where characters were printed on upside-down pages that remained unseen until completion. Keyboards and typing technology have come a long way over the past couple of centuries. The first typing devices were designed and patented in the 1700s while the first manufactured typing devices came about in the 1870s.
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![]() To start, you should the content settings in Chrome and make sure websites are allowed to load images on your computer. So, let’s take a look at what you can do when you see the broken picture icon on websites. Whether Chrome is failing to load images due to a misconfigured setting or a shoddy browser extension, this post covers all the possible solutions for the Chrome not loading images issue. And if images are not loading in Chrome, you won’t get the full experience of viewing a website. However, there are times when your favorite browser - Google Chrome - fails to load them up and ends up showing a broken image icon instead. When used correctly, they often deliver contextual messages in the blink of an eye. You can do that by pressing H while running w3m.Images play a significant role on any website. W3m doesn’t use the same keyboard shortcuts as other command line browsers, so get ready to learn some new ones. The browser doesn’t do JavaScript, though.Īs far as the important job of rendering web pages, w3m does a better job than Links2 or ELinks even with complex pages. Like ELinks2, w3m lets you view images on a page using an external program. You can navigate web pages using a mouse, and the browser will render tables and even accept cookies. While it might not have as many features as the other browsers I discuss in this post, w3m gets the job done. ![]() When I first fired up w3m, it reminded me of a cross between the classic text-based browser Lynx and the UNIX/Linux text viewer more. ELinks opens the image with an application like ImageMagick or GraphicsMagick. Either click the placeholder for the image or highlight it and press v on your keyboard. Press ESC on your keyboard display a set of menus that let you enter and save URLs, add bookmarks, set up the browser, and more.ĮLinks lacks a graphical mode, but it does have a nifty feature that lets you view images on a web page. One feature that makes ELinks stand out from other command line browsers is its menu system. While it supports using a mouse to follow hyperlinks, ELinks lacks support for Javascript. And like Links2, ELinks can display tables and frames. Like Links2, ELinks is a fork of the Links browser. You can also use your mouse to follow hyperlinks whether you’re in text or graphical mode. The browser can display frames and tables, and supports basic JavaScript. That’s not the only trick that Links2 can do. When you start it by typing links2 at the command line and go to a website, the result is something like this:īut when you run links2 -g then visit a site, the result is something like this: It’s a lot like its predecessor in that it gives you the option to run either in text-only mode or graphical mode. Links2 bills itself as the graphical version of the venerable Links. Let’s take a look at three browsers for the command line. They’re niche, but still get the job done. Web browsers that run in a terminal window are alive and kicking. You’d think that browsing the web at the command line would have gone the way of the tag. Jump forward to these days of web browsers like Firefox, Chrome, Safari, and a few others. Some of use visited web pages using command-line, text-only browsers like the venerable Lynx. A time when most of us went online using low-powered PCs or dumb terminals, often over slow dial-up connections. Let’s take a trip back in time to the early, simpler days of the web. ( Note: This post was first published, in a slightly different form, at and appears here via a CC-BY-SA 4.0 license.) 3 Web Browsers for the Linux Command Line Open Source Musingsģ Web Browsers for the Linux Command Line Basic revenue reports: See your earning and your top-performing services and clients.Unlimited devices: Everything in Goldie instantly syncs across all your devices - phones, tablets, or computers.Sync with Apple and Google Calendars: It’s now easy to keep track of all your personal and business appointments in one place.Your appointment scheduler has never been more accessible. Calendar planner: Effortlessly flip through your appointment calendar with the Day, Three Day, Week, Month, and Mini Month views.Or send mass texts to your clients with a promotion! Marketing messages: Send rebooking reminders to clients you haven’t seen in a while.Service offerings: Define your services by setting the price and duration, or personalize them with colors. ![]() Impress and inform potential clients with a professional online presence. Online booking system: Accept client bookings 24/7, based on your schedule, via your own personal website.Client management: Easily search for clients to view their history, notes, or their upcoming appointments. ![]()
![]() The back is made of a blue brushed aluminum and has an orange racing stripe on the side, the Onyx logo is the same color. The screen made of glass and it is flush with the bezel. The Note Air features a 10.3 inch E INK Carta HD Display with a resolution of 1872×1404 and 227 PPI. There is also a slew of new pen/pencil types to shade, highlight and really flex your inner artist. One of the big improvements that Onyx to the software is including layers, a similar system to Remarkable. Android 10 is the major selling point and you can also run two apps at the same time, you download apps from Google Play. It features an all new asymmetrical design and has a very fast Snapdragon processor and tons of storage. Well, I hope you are right, for the sake of anyone who will buy the device.The Onyx Boox Note Air is one of the most intriguing new digital note taking device of 2020. I am therefore fairly confident that this is a Boyle-manufactured, not an Onyx-manufactured, device. Yes, it is possible that it is re-branded Onyx (though it makes little sense to go to the trouble of rebranding it, and then still call it an "Onyx" on their website - further suggesting that this was a typo), but both the button-layout and the icons on them exactly match Boyue standard layout (and are dissimilar to O-B designs) - and Boyue fairly frequently do rebranded products. a different manufacturer).Īs can be seen from the forum pics, "inkBOOK" is the branding on the device - no "Onyx" or "Boox" to be seen. Certainly the layout of the specs do not seem to match those of the couple of known-Onyx products (M92 & i62HD) from that site that I compared it to - suggesting that they came from a different source (i.e. The webpage (minimally) refers to it as the "inkBOOK Onyx", however this may be a typo (the subordinate instructed to enter the device details into the website mistakenly thought that it was an Onyx). The name "inkBOOK" is, of course, Arta Tech's name for the device. Here's a link to its specs page on the Arta Tech (Polish) site: When I have more time, I'll have to explore a little more. I found an Onyx i65 that is in a blue case, but the specs are all wrong. Its measurements don't line up with any device from either that I can find just yet. One member thought this device was from Boyue, another said no, it's from Onyx. I tried translating that forum on my browser, and got a rough translation as a result. ![]() Has anybody come across anything similar? I must admit I find Boyue-buttons combined with slimmer chassis to be quite an attractive prospect (if they'd only combine it with a Kindle Voyage/Kobo Glow HD screen, it would be my perfect eReader, given current technologies). Polish Onyx-Boox retailer Arta Tech have just announced a new eReader, the inkBOOK, with specs similar to both the Onyx Boox C67ML and Boyue T62+, but dimensions slimmer than either those models (159×117×7 mm, versus 170.2 x 117.3 x 8.7mm and 160 x 123 x 8.5 mm, respectively).Ī picture on a forum reveals no Onyx-Boox branding, and styling distinctly reminiscent of Boyue designs. But then if Energy eReader Pro is exactly the same device as Boyue T62 then how come this one says max 32GB and that one says max 64GB? Does it mean that Energy Sistem included maybe a "software support" for 64GB SD cards and is capable of reading from NTFS (or other filesystems suitable for larger partitions disks)? ![]() As I was reading about this on the Internet, people said that the devices supporting max 32GB SDHC would detect 64GB SDXC cards but would only show them if they're formatted in FAT32 and the accessible size would be 32GB. The Boyue specs (on the box and on the sites that are selling the device) says this device supports max 32GB but the Energy Sistem specs sheet says the device supports max 64GB SDHC (Aren't 64GB+ ones called "SDXC"?!). Has anyone tried a 64GB MicroSD card on Boyue T62 or Energy Sistem eReader Pro (or the Boyue T61 / Icarus Illumina E653 even)? Does the device detect the whole 64GB and is it able to fully access it? ![]() But the people managing and creating them fall into the same old pitfalls, because software product development is not required to avoid them. And because they're complex, they each suffer from the standard problems that happen to software products (many books written about them). They're often complex and need to interoperate with one another, yet are built by separate teams. Three, it's genuinely hard to create groupware products that are both high-quality and useful. Then try to integrate different products, and you're really integrating different messes. Combine that with a lack of investment or cost-cutting, or some of the lead product people leaving, and the product gets worse. Buying one of these often leaves you with a huge mess on your hands. You may not know this, but startups tend to churn out some horrifying, janky code just to get themselves off the ground. Two, often these products are actually acquisitions of startups. If it were a startup flush with VC money, they could invest all they have into the product, but at an enterprise, it's often the opposite. It's common for a product to get a low level of investment that only meets the needs of adding new features without ensuring quality. That means they have a budget, timelines, expected revenue figures/costs. The products are often managed as independent business cases. One, often these products are made by companies where the products are not their primary revenue source. So while they "admit" to 4 objects, that's likely an under count because I wouldn't expect them to regularly check if all 100 trillion objects are accessible because of how long that would take. ![]() The saving grace is that most objects aren't accessed (maybe not ever again) & they detect & correct durability errors on access to ensure that accessed objects definitely aren't lost. With 11 9s of durability annually you'd expect to lose 100 objects a year. 2 years ago, S3 stored 100 trillion objects. My hunch is that the data is permanently lost.Īdditionally, S3 stores an enormous amount of data such that probabilistically they're bound to lose something to HW failure. That's a huge part of why S3 doesn't really do a whole lot of feature development (well that + it's hard to maintain a 20 yold codebase).Īlso, we're talking about Google Drive here which isn't GCS (Google's S3 competitor) but a higher-level product layered on top of GCS but with it's own book keeping / ACLs etc. However, such models do not (& really cannot) account for the existence of bugs or introduction of new ones. replication and/or erasure coding) and the durability guarantee is about HW failures only. What this means is that they model a "correctly functioning system" (i.e. Your OSes have more #UAC that Vista now, something you made fun of, they aren’t fluid anymore.S3 is designed for 11 9s of durability. if you’re listening, doubt it, get your *stuff* together already. I think it has surpassed Apple’s own now. You could use as an alternative some other thing self-hosted, like Nextcloud and leverage the excellent storage backplane your unit does have and, leverage the second-to-none customer support the app has. My biggest issue overall though, is that it constantly disconnects and you had to relink as if it was synced for the first time this could very easily cause corrupt data somewhere. If you do this so it stops bugging then it’d complain of the cert not matching the SLDN or whatever QuickConnnectID represents in the unit. It still keeps pushing to connect instead using QuickConnectID even using a certificate-validated-FQDN in the local network. I was dreaming to get this app before so if I could get rid of the resource-murdering Resilio Sync, but when I first downloaded a beta version of DSM that had it I felt it was exactly the same issues DS Cloud had/has with a plastic-ier look. Install Synology Drive on your Mac using the same steps for Windows OS above.
![]() That means you’re not going to find brand new bestsellers on the list, but if you’re into classic literature, you can’t go wrong. LibriVox a service full of public domain audiobooks, read by volunteers from around the globe. You can listen to your audiobooks on the web or on the go, via Scribd’s Android and iOS apps. Scribd also makes it easy to find what you’re interested in, either through the search bar at the top of the page, or by clicking one of the categories to see what’s new, trending, or what the site’s editors suggest from the category. The service overall has something like 30,000 audiobooks, and once you’re a subscriber, you can listen to as many as you like, anytime. The service is affordable, charging only $US9/month, and while its book selection isn’t the biggest, it’s still massive and offers lots of listening options and popular titles to enjoy. ![]() You may not initially think of Scribd as a service associated with audiobooks, but it actually has a broad selection of titles, both fiction and non-fiction, available to download from the site. You’ll find lots of great books at steep discounts, including new releases and New York Times’ bestsellers. Downpour’s biggest benefit, aside from offering completely DRM-free books, is how affordable its books are. If you choose to rent, you can pay a lower price and listen to the book you’ve rented, and if you’re not finished, you can even extend your rental for a few days (for a fee). The service works like a bookstore where you can buy books directly to own forever, or you can subscribe for $US13/month and accumulate credits to get free audiobooks, again to own and keep forever. When your rental period is up, you won’t be able to access the books from your library anymore, but any purchases you make are yours forever. Your place is automatically saved and synced across devices, and you can download, replay or listen to your audiobooks as often as you like. m4b files, and you can listen to them on any device where you have the Downpour app installed (Android, iOS, and Windows Phone are supported, as well as the Kindle) or you have web access to the site. You have the option to download your audiobooks as mp3s, or as chaptered. Overdrive is completely free, as long as you have a library card.ĭownpour is an audiobook store and subscription service with a rapidly expanding catalogue (the service adds thousands of new titles every month) and completely DRM-free audiobooks, both for sale and to rent. When you’ve finished, your books are automatically “checked in” to the library (or removed from your collection.) You are limited to the selection of audiobooks available at your local supported library, and the level of demand in your community for the books you want to check out. Over 30,000 libraries use OverDrive to make it easy to check out audiobooks and ebooks directly from your smartphone or tablet - all you need is your library card, and a library in your community that supports the service (a large number of libraries in Australia are members) From there, just install the app on your smartphone, tablet or desktop (Android, iOS, Windows, Mac, Chrome, Amazon devices and more are supported.) Offline listening is supported, and many books can be burned to CD or copied to portable media from your desktop. The service integrates with your Amazon account so your progress on physical books and audiobooks are synced, and you get discounts on audiobook versions of books you own. You don’t have to be an Audible member to buy its audiobooks though - you just get a 30% discount if you are on any purchases you make. ![]() ![]() From there, you get a discount off of the retail price of any books you enjoy, a free book every month, and the ability to listen your books on your smartphone using Audible’s mobile apps, on your computer, or just about anywhere you go. You can try the service for free for 30 days and get a free audiobook that’s yours to own, and if you like the service, stick with it for $US15/month. Audible - an Amazon company - has over 150,000 audiobooks available to buy and own, rent and stream, or listen to offline. Audible is the dominant brand in the digital audiobooks field. ![]() Some ukiyo-e artists specialized in creating paintings, but most works were prints. In the 1760s, the success of Suzuki Harunobu's "brocade prints" led to full-colour production becoming standard, with ten or more blocks used to create each print. By the 1740s, artists such as Okumura Masanobu used multiple woodblocks to print areas of colour. Colour prints were introduced gradually, and at first were only used for special commissions. The earliest ukiyo-e works, Hishikawa Moronobu's paintings and monochromatic prints of women, emerged in the 1670s. ![]() Printed or painted ukiyo-e works were popular with the chōnin class, who had become wealthy enough to afford to decorate their homes with them. The term ukiyo-e ( 浮世絵) translates as "picture of the floating world".Īfter Edo (now Tokyo) became the seat of the ruling Tokugawa shogunate in 1603, the chōnin class of merchants, craftsmen, and workers benefited most from the city's rapid economic growth, and began to indulge in and patronise the entertainment of kabuki theatre, geisha, and courtesans of the pleasure districts the term ukiyo ("floating world") came to describe this hedonistic lifestyle. Its artists produced woodblock prints and paintings of subjects including female beauties kabuki actors and sumo wrestlers scenes from history and folk tales travel scenes and landscapes Japanese flora and fauna and erotica. Ukiyo-e is a Japanese printmaking technique which flourished in the 17th through 19th centuries. Main articles: Ukiyo-e and woodblock printing in Japan Plate used to print ukiyo-e This woodblock print has influenced several notable artists and musicians, including Vincent van Gogh, Claude Debussy, Claude Monet, and Utagawa Hiroshige. The Great Wave off Kanagawa has been described as "possibly the most reproduced image in the history of all art", as well as being a contender for the "most famous artwork in Japanese history". Several museums throughout the world hold copies of The Great Wave, many of which came from 19th-century private collections of Japanese prints. The composition of The Great Wave is a synthesis of traditional Japanese prints and use of graphical perspective developed in Europe, and earned him immediate success in Japan and later in Europe, where Hokusai's art inspired works by the Impressionists. The print is Hokusai's best-known work and the first in his series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, in which the use of Prussian blue revolutionized Japanese prints. The print depicts three boats moving through a storm-tossed sea, with a large, cresting wave forming a spiral in the centre and Mount Fuji visible in the background. 'Under the Wave off Kanagawa') is a woodblock print by Japanese ukiyo-e artist Hokusai, created in late 1831 during the Edo period of Japanese history. The Great Wave off Kanagawa ( Japanese: 神奈川沖浪裏, Hepburn: Kanagawa-oki Nami Ura, lit. ![]() Because attracting clients relies largely on the appeal of a strong reputation and word-of-mouth referrals, keeping track of customers' needs in this way is crucial to generating new business. In some cases, the studio manager will assign recording and mixing engineers to specific projects. The studio manager keeps close track of ongoing projects to ensure that they are on schedule and that clients' specific needs are being met (e.g., hiring a piano tuner before the piano-playing pop star's session). While the specific duties of the studio manager differ greatly based on factors like the studio's size or the owner's involvement, client satisfaction is a core part of almost every studio manager's job. In small studios, the studio manager may also be the lead recording engineer. Automate Studio Manager Administratoren - Kurse auf Deutsch - Studio Manager 20.x About this course In diesem Kurs erhalten Berichtsadministratoren eine ausfhrliche Einfhrung in das Erstellen, Bearbeiten, Verffentlichen, Freigeben und Planen von Berichten. Their widely ranging duties can include coordinating with artists, producers, managers, and labels to schedule recording sessions hiring and supervising recording engineers, assistants, and other technical and creative staff helping to select the studio's equipment and-critically-marketing the studio to potential new clients.Īccounting tasks such as payroll and billing may also fall to the studio manager, although those who manage large studios typically will delegate such duties to hired staff. Be sure to use the latest versions of both the Driver and Editor available from this site. The Studio Manager V2 Host (64bit) is for use with the Editor software and either the USB-MIDI Driver or Network Driver. Whether running a one-room outpost or a bustling big-city complex, studio managers are responsible for the smooth and profitable operation of a recording studio. Click 'All apps' button at the bottom right side of Start screen. You can also use them fresh in apricot salads, and delicious homemade syrups. Perfections are very good canned, and in recipes like apricot muffins, apricot filled cookies, apricot pound cake and in dried apricot recipes. Perfection apricots ship very well, so if you're traveling home with apricots, these are a good choice. A large, round, orange, and very attractive apricot. Perfection apricots are an older apricot variety that produces very large fruit, and are very good eaten fresh. Don't believe me? Here's a blurb I stole from the Okanogan Vacation Guide: Sure, they are delicious eaten fresh, and are also a joy to preserve, but they photograph so beautifully, which pretty much seals the deal for me. They are one of my all-time favorite apricots for several reasons. * I used " Perfection" Apricots, from the Wenatchee Valley in Washington State. Something tells me I'll have no trouble meeting getting my daily requirement of Vitamin A. The best part about making a big quantity? No more sipping it slowly out of a tiny tin can. ![]() I don't think I can ever go back to popping open those cute little cans ever again. It was definitely worth the time I spent making my own Apricot Nectar. This nectar will be great as is, or in cocktails, or added to recipes**. Three pint jars, for friends and their grandkids. (I'm getting the next generation hooked early.)Īnd in my pantry? One dozen 12 ounce jars. One 20 oz jar, for our immediate consumption. You might need to increase sugar to balance out the tartness. The lemon juice is unnecessary if you are planning to consume the nectar immediately or store it in the fridge.Ĭook the Apricot Nectar just enough to blend and prepare it for ladling into warm jars (on the left). > Some canning guides suggest that if you are planning to process the Apricot Nectar, you could (optionally) add 1 TBS lemon juice per quart of nectar, to retain color and increase acidity. ( 16 ounces Apricot Pulp - to be composted)Īpricot Puree + Apricot Juice = Apricot Nectar Then I pureed the cooked-down apricots (that remained in the top portion of the extractor.) It took about 90 minutes for the steam juice extractor to extract the juice. A hand-cranked food mill is very efficient, plus using it burns a few calories! It's shocking to see how little pulp is left behind from 18 pounds of apricots. The puree is extruded into the bowl below and the stringy pulp stays behind. Scoop the pulp into a food mill and crank away. Orange is my favorite color and looking at these Apricots makes me very happy. They really are this bright and beautiful. This is what the 18 pounds of apricots look like as they cook down. It also ensures that the tubing is now sterilized for any of the remaining juice that drains from the steam juice extractor. I'm new to this steam juice extractor thing, but I read somewhere that it helps to dissolve the sugar if you pour the first quart jar of juice back over the fruit. Sugar helps to preserve the nectar, and in my opinion, it tastes much better with sugar too! Just letting you know in advance that Apricot Nectar does contain sugar. I'm pretty sure I couldn't live without it on a daily basis. IMPORTANT NOTE: The apricots do not need to be pitted or cut into pieces! I am not sure why I prepped them first, but the other batches and did whole with the same results.īefore we go further I need to confess something: I have no fear of sugar. This is what 18 pounds of apricots look like in the top portion of my vintage steam juice extractor. The following is a step-by-step tutorial about making Apricot Nectar. ![]() ![]() In fact, 2-3 apricots will give you nearly 50% of your daily value of Vitamin A.įresh apricots contain no fat and a small amount of carbs (about 8g of carbs for two apricots, 2 of those being from dietary fiber) and let's not forget bonus points for being so satisfying. Taking the time to make it from scratch took Apricot Nectar to a whole other level.įirst, here are a few facts: it's made with fresh apricots, so it contains hefty amounts of vitamins A, C, E, potassium, and iron, as well as being a great source of beta-carotene. I recently made it from scratch and I'm so glad I did. It was considered a special occasion treat for us, so I remember sipping it a tiny bit at a time, to make it last as long as possible. I remember when I was a kid it would show up once in awhile in our pantry or fridge. I grew up drinking it out of cute little cans. ![]() All employment decisions at SiteOne-including those relating to hiring, promotion, transfers, benefits, compensation, placement, and termination-will be made without regard to race, color, national origin, genetic information, creed, sex, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, religion, age, veteran status, uniform service, pregnancy, disability, or any other factor protected by applicable law. United states Georgia Cobb county Kennesaw Lockhart drive northwest Customer Experience (CX) Specialist - Bilingual (English - Spanish) Yard. SiteOne Landscape Supply is strongly committed to providing equal employment opportunities for all associates and all applicants for employment. ![]() THE QUALIFICATIONS DETAILED IN THIS JOB DESCRIPTION ARE NOT CONSIDERED THE MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS NECESSARY TO PERFORM THE JOB, BUT RATHER AS GUIDELINES. THE INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN IS NOT INTENDED TO BE AN EXHAUSTIVE LIST OF ALL RESPONSIBILITIES, DUTIES AND QUALIFICATIONS REQUIRED OF INDIVIDUALS PERFORMING THE JOB.
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