You should have added this to your pitch, above. I think your pricing is fantastic, but mentioning that you are willing to go even further for people who really need the help would have probably garnered a lot of…
Good luck. Yours is the only one in this batch that made me go: "Hey, that's a smart idea."
No doubt, gaming support has been a serious business for a while. Far beyond the gold farming, item trade, and "pay me for voice chat" underground. I'd take a bet that almost everybody reading this who cares about cloud…
That's it, I am done. No more serious IT work for me. I am going to become a gamers consultant. If there are people who care enough to make things like this, there must be people who would pay decent money for…
That's why you don't give out your channel name, but your web site. And from there you can link people to whatever you want them to see without any worries about where it is hosted.
It worked fine in Windows 7, and barely gets "Yes" or "No" in its current iteration.
And this is how musical text to speech sounds 35 years later: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxC0kD-GuBQ
>It would be cool with a completely offline SpeechRecognition... Nuance still makes Dragon and Windscribe branded speech recognition software. Dragon was great +20 years ago. Not sure how it is now, but investigating…
>10 MHz >1964 That's insane. What's even more insane is that a bit over 20 years later homecomputers reached that frequency. And in the next decade they reached over 100 MHz. - Pure lunacy. Posted from my 5 GHz…
I have one principle, after over 30 years of programming and a decade in "Software Archeology": Consider the poor sod who will have to deal with your work in 30 years.
You can get a volume license by buying a bunch of licenses for stuff that's $5-$10 per user. You'll still end up with a total of ~$300 (Including one LTSC license), but it is entirely legal and supported by Microsoft.
You should have added this to your pitch, above. I think your pricing is fantastic, but mentioning that you are willing to go even further for people who really need the help would have probably garnered a lot of…
Good luck. Yours is the only one in this batch that made me go: "Hey, that's a smart idea."
No doubt, gaming support has been a serious business for a while. Far beyond the gold farming, item trade, and "pay me for voice chat" underground. I'd take a bet that almost everybody reading this who cares about cloud…
That's it, I am done. No more serious IT work for me. I am going to become a gamers consultant. If there are people who care enough to make things like this, there must be people who would pay decent money for…
That's why you don't give out your channel name, but your web site. And from there you can link people to whatever you want them to see without any worries about where it is hosted.
It worked fine in Windows 7, and barely gets "Yes" or "No" in its current iteration.
And this is how musical text to speech sounds 35 years later: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxC0kD-GuBQ
>It would be cool with a completely offline SpeechRecognition... Nuance still makes Dragon and Windscribe branded speech recognition software. Dragon was great +20 years ago. Not sure how it is now, but investigating…
>10 MHz >1964 That's insane. What's even more insane is that a bit over 20 years later homecomputers reached that frequency. And in the next decade they reached over 100 MHz. - Pure lunacy. Posted from my 5 GHz…
I have one principle, after over 30 years of programming and a decade in "Software Archeology": Consider the poor sod who will have to deal with your work in 30 years.
You can get a volume license by buying a bunch of licenses for stuff that's $5-$10 per user. You'll still end up with a total of ~$300 (Including one LTSC license), but it is entirely legal and supported by Microsoft.