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I'm looking at upgrading the work laptop - is business pricing from Lenovo Pro actually any better than through the public site? Opinions on Reddit and similar appear divided.
Get your business seen overseas - Nexus Translations
I want to send an email to someone who doesn't know me (and hasn't received an email from me previously) - using Apple Mail app on MacBook. In the outgoing email, it shows: From: Joe Bloggs - jb@xtra.co.nz
I'm guessing it's showing that because I have myself entered in my contacts list.
When the recipient gets the email, will they see all of the sender info - as I've shown it above including my name - or will they just see the email address?
Sometimes I just sit and think. Other times I just sit.
The recipient will get your email address, and your "full name". You can view and change the name in Mail's settings... unless you're sending from an iCloud account in which case you need to log into the iCloud website and change it there, because Apple loves making things complicated.
Edit for clarity: If you go to the Mail menu > Accounts > Choose your account on the left (there's probably only one), then the text shown in "Email Address" is what the recipient will see. For a non-iCloud account you can drop down the Email Address menu and choose Edit Email Addresses to modify the name.
Behodar:
The recipient will get your email address, and your "full name". You can view and change the name in Mail's settings... unless you're sending from an iCloud account in which case you need to log into the iCloud website and change it there, because Apple loves making things complicated.
Edit for clarity: If you go to the Mail menu > Accounts > Choose your account on the left (there's probably only one), then the text shown in "Email Address" is what the recipient will see. For a non-iCloud account you can drop down the Email Address menu and choose Edit Email Addresses to modify the name.
Many thanks - much appreciated - just what I needed.
Sometimes I just sit and think. Other times I just sit.
Why does your pre-pay phone account get killed after a year of non-use, even if you still have credit on it? What is the logic/excuse for this?
Plesse igmore amd axxept applogies in adbance fir anu typos
The logic is that they want money. The excuse is that they want money.
Rikkitic:
Why does your pre-pay phone account get killed after a year of non-use, even if you still have credit on it? What is the logic/excuse for this?
It gets killed if you don't top up for a year, I don't think the telcos care much whether you use the sim or not.
Behodar:
The logic is that they want money. The excuse is that they want money.
It's almost like they are running a business.
Rikkitic: Why does your pre-pay phone account get killed after a year of non-use, even if you still have credit on it? What is the logic/excuse for this?
accounting and legal, I'm not sure which categories.
Limiting financial liability is a big one. Bean Counters hate it.
Handle9:
It gets killed if you don't top up for a year, I don't think the telcos care much whether you use the sim or not.
Doesn't answer my question.
Plesse igmore amd axxept applogies in adbance fir anu typos
What I am asking is what justification or reason is given for doing this? All the providers seem to do this but do any say why? They must have a reason, even if it is a stupid one. At some point someone must have made a decision that this is what their policy would be.
Plesse igmore amd axxept applogies in adbance fir anu typos
Rikkitic:
What I am asking is what justification or reason is given for doing this? All the providers seem to do this but do any say why? They must have a reason, even if it is a stupid one. At some point someone must have made a decision that this is what their policy would be.
The reason/s are most likely what @networkn suggested and they can.
Carried over customer credit shows as a liability on their balance sheet without corresponding cashflow. They likely won’t be able to recognise the revenue for the credit until the credit is released, one way or the other.
At a guess:
Handle9: Carried over customer credit shows as a liability on their balance sheet without corresponding cashflow. They likely won’t be able to recognise the revenue for the credit until the credit is released, one way or the other.
Wouldn't that be compensated for by the breakage from the unused credit balance?
(You give the telco X amount of money, they invest it and collect interest while your account with them sits idle).
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