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The ReMarkable Tablet won't, however, be a good replacement for a more conventional tablet like an iPad. It's not meant for the same function an iPad would provide, like surfing the Internet ...
Remarkable may refer to: Remarkable (stationery), a British company that makes stationery products out of recycled materials; reMarkable, an E Ink writing tablet for ...
Officeworks is a category killer within the office supplies product category. [24] Each of its stores carries more than 30,000 products, to which it adds a further 1,000 to 2,000 products annually. [25] Officeworks aims to cater for the entire needs of the small office, home office and families with student dependants. [25]
Remarkable Recycled Ltd (05394545 - Incorporated on 16 March 2005) is a UK company that makes stationery products out of recycled materials. With its sister company, Edvironment Ltd, it sells a range of recycled products, such as the recycled CD and vending cup pencil.
On Wikipedia, notability is a test used by editors to decide whether a given topic warrants its own article. For people, the person who is the topic of a biographical article should be "worthy of notice" [1] or "note" [2] —that is, "remarkable" [2] or "significant, interesting, or unusual enough to deserve attention or to be recorded" [1] within Wikipedia as a written account of that person ...
The interior of an Office Depot store in Wyoming, United States. The interior of a stationer in Hanoi, Vietnam.. Office supply retailing is the commercial trade of stationery and other office supplies.
Godin gives examples of products and marketing programs that have been remarkable, but indicates that it is no use copying these directly. He says, "Today, the one sure way to fail is to be boring. Your one chance for success is to be remarkable." [3] The book ends with a Ten Point Checklist that sets out how to create a remarkable product.
The O*NET system varies from the DOT in a number of ways. It is a digital database which offers a "flexible system, allowing users to reconfigure data to meet their needs" as opposed to the "fixed format" of the DOT; it reflects the employment needs of an Information society rather than an Industrial society; costs the government and users much less than a printed book would, and is easier to ...