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Page "Low-cost carrier" ¶ 5
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Low-cost and carrier
* Low-cost carrier business model
Low-cost carrier Presidential Airways also began service from the Jetport in 1986, flying a route from Portland to Washington's Dulles International Airport.
* Low-cost carrier
# REDIRECT Low-cost carrier
# REDIRECT Low-cost carrier
# redirect Low-cost carrier

Low-cost and .
Low-cost time base correctors ( TBC ) specifically designed to work with the Toaster quickly came to market, most of which were designed as standard Amiga bus cards.
Low-cost production quality was typical for early black metal artists with low budgets, where recordings would often be done in their homes or basements.
Low-cost systems use a radar altimeter, barometric altimeter and clock to navigate a digital strip map.
Low-cost " home theater in a box " systems advertise their integration and simplicity.
Low-cost commercial vans and 4WDs in Australia continued with carburetors even into the 2000s, the last being the Mitsubishi Express van in 2003.
Low-cost high-volume-produced patio door safety glass is an inexpensive way to accomplish this goal.
Low-cost processors now allow higher-speed, but more complex, serial communication standards such as USB and FireWire to replace RS-232.
Low-cost units may be disposable with no provision to replace batteries or bulbs, and are sometimes imprinted with advertising for promotional purposes.
Low-cost Mexican airline Volaris started service between OAK and the airline's two main locations: Guadalajara, and Toluca on July 16, 2009.
The north pier features a more minimalistic design with walk-boarding-gates instead of jet bridges to cater to high demand from no-frills Low-cost airlines.
Low-cost off-peak electric power is used to run the pumps.
Low-cost wide-angle lens add-ons are available for many cameras and some can even be fitted outside the camera housing for versatile use.
; Low-cost computer hardware: Leveraging the technology of personal computers, adding a microprocessor enabled complex control functions to be expressed in software rather than wiring.
; Low-cost, high-capacity memory: By 1995, a music workstation might have 16 to 64 megabytes of memory in a few chips, which had required a rack of cards in 1985.
Low-cost accelerometers replace the mercury tilt switch in precision applications.
** Low-cost infrastructure elements that can increase the speed and reliability of bus service in lanes shared with general traffic include Bus bulbs, boarding islands, and curb realignments.
Low-cost carriers are intended to be low-cost, so in many cases employees work multiple roles.
Low-cost power strips often come with only one MOV mounted between the live and neutral wires.
The organization and its founder, Muhammad Yunus, were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 ; the organization's Low-cost Housing Program won a World Habitat Award in 1998.
Low-cost passive RFID tags were designed to uniquely identify each item manufactured.
The program involved demolishing the rest of the makeshift houses left untouched by the fire, and the construction of the Shek Kip Mei Low-cost Housing Estate in their place.
* The May 1977 Dr. Dobb's Journal reprinted an article by Joseph Weisbecker of RCA Laboratories (" A Practical, Low-cost, Home / School Microprocessor System ") describing the design philosophies and economies that went into designing the VIP -- which was at the time called FRED (" Flexible Recreational and Educational Device ").
Low-cost airlines remain a commonly-referenced example of a contestable market ; entrants have the possibility of leasing aircraft and should be able to respond to high profits by quickly entering and exiting.

carrier and business
This resulted in a new ASR9000 product family intended to consolidate company's carrier ethernet and subscriber management business around EZChip-based hardware and IOS-XR.
Deakin worked as a storekeeper, water-carter and general carrier and then became a partner in a coaching business and later manager of Cobb and Co in Victoria .< ref name = dab >
:" How can it be an aid, how can controversies which may seriously interrupt or threaten to interrupt the business of carriers ( I paraphrase the words of the statute ), be averted or composed if the carrier can bring on the conflict or prevent its amicable settlement by the exercise of mere whim and caprice?
It can sometimes call the business office of the local exchange carrier which owns or last leased the line, such as via 6-1-1.
S. C. Compania Națională de Transporturi Aeriene Române TAROM S. A., doing business as TAROM Romanian Air Transport, is the flag carrier and oldest currently operating airline of Romania.
Another carrier with a base at the airport is Aurela Airlines with a fleet of two Boeing 737 and two Boeing 757 jets, specialising in business charter operations and holiday charter flights to African, Asian, and European resort destinations.
NTL also provides extensive business telephony and data network services that provide a significant portion of its revenue streams, and carrier services to other telcos.
This departure was followed a year later by the arrival of Air Vermont, a regional carrier that served a route between Portland and Burlington until about 1983 or 1984, when it too went out of business.
That same year, small regional carrier Ransome Airlines, doing business as Delta Connection, began a route between Portland and Boston.
Although Hooters Air billed itself as a low-fare carrier, rows of seats were removed from the aircraft to provide 34 " seating pitch to all passengers, comparable to the legroom offered by many carriers ' business classes ; in keeping with the golf-friendly orientation of the carrier, this was called " Club Class " seating.
Nevertheless the Earl Shilton boot and shoe heritage provided the opportunity for other businesses to thrive alongside them, namely local carriers such as Woodwards ( now the bakery distribution business ) and Crowfoots, ( still operating as a parcel carrier ).
Rogers Telecom ( formerly Call-Net Enterprises which did business under the Sprint Canada brand ) is a major competitive telephone carrier throughout Canada.
On 13 February 2007, Pacific Airlines changed its business model, becoming the first Vietnamese low-cost carrier to operate domestic and regional flights.
As the carrier matured, regional business destinations such as Jakarta, Phnom Penh and Yangon were added to its network, thereby broadening the airline's appeal beyond the holiday-maker to include the business traveller.
A " common carrier " is somewhat like a utility, inasmuch as it often has certain rights, powers and monopolies on its services beyond those normally afforded regular business enterprises.
Traditional perceptions of the " low-cost carrier " as a stripped-down, no-frills airline, as seen on Southwest Airlines, have been changing as new entrants to the market adapt the business model in new ways.
* Maxjet, which has ceased its scheduled business flights, but is planning to restart as a luxury charter carrier
Vivodi's logo Vivodi is a private telecom operator in Greece that offers low telephone rates for OTE subscribers through call-by-call, carrier preselection or prepaid cards, and for business customers, also offering leased line solutions.
In addition to its telecommunication services provider and carrier units, Etisalat incorporates a number of additional non-telecom business units under the umbrella of Etisalat Services Holding LLC.
Another specialist area is mobile telecoms operator ( carrier ) business where billion-dollar investments in networks are needed but marketshares are won and lost on issues from segmentation to handset subsidies.
provides that the federal Switchblade Knife Act does not apply to: 1 ) any common carrier or contract carrier, with respect to any switchblade knife shipped, transported, or delivered for shipment in interstate commerce in the ordinary course of business ; 2 ) the manufacture, sale, transportation, distribution, possession, or introduction into interstate commerce of switchblade knives pursuant to contract with the Armed Forces ; 3 ) to the Armed Forces or any member or employee thereof acting in the performance of his duty ; 4 ) the possession and transportation upon his person of any switchblade knife with a blade three inches or less in length by any individual who has only one arm, and 5 ) a knife " that contains a spring, detent, or other mechanism designed to create a bias toward closure of the blade and that requires exertion applied to the blade by hand, wrist, or arm to overcome the bias toward closure to assist in opening the knife.

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