I moved around all over the place when I was a kid. My family left Pasadena when I was nine. We pulled a reverse Beverly Hillbillies and moved from California to Tennessee (though it's not really clear where the Beverly Hillbillies were from). A year in Tennessee, a year in Alabama,
Windows 7 Starter Key, another year in Tennessee, a year in West Virginia, two years in Virginia and then we landed in Kansas. I was a Salthawk of Hutchinson High School until I graduated and went back to Pasadena for college. Living in Kansas, and especially learning to drive in Kansas, I gained a tremendous appreciation for open space. There were these "mile roads" - a near-perfect grid laid out across the prairie with one-mile squares of primarily farmland in between. You could tick off distances between towns on the mile roads. You could literally drive for hours and not see another vehicle on the road,
Office 2010 Standard Product Key, short of maybe a tractor or a buggy. The road network in the United States is comprised of around four million miles of highways, streets, and roads. Twenty-five percent of the total vehicle miles of travel occurs on 1% of the road surface: the Interstate Highway System. I don't exactly know what percentage of the four million miles lies within the state of Kansas,
Buy Office 2010 Key, but I would venture that a tiny percentage of the total US vehicle miles occur on most of those roads. In the last blog post we talked about Office as a supermarket. The features you use are not the same as your neighbor's. Seldom-used features are still extremely valuable to those that use them, and also for the option of using them when you need to. The same is true for roads. Some people ask us to actually remove the "lesser used" features from Office. That would be like finding all of the roads in the United States that support less than 1% of total vehicle miles traveled and ripping them up. Thousands of miles of roadway would disappear. Just because most people don't drive in Kansas, should we make it harder for those that depend on South Langdon Road to get from Plevna to Penalosa? The Table of Contents command in Word is used about 0.0004% of the time, but if we took it out we would disrupt the work of millions of people. If we took away ten of the least frequently-used commands in Office,
Windows 7 Professional Product Key, we might impact up to 40 million customers. People depend on that functionality to bring their paycheck home with less repetitive manual effort,
office Home and Student 2010 key, to have a more kick-ass presentation for school, to run their kid's soccer league with less headache. I loved Kansas. I still think of it fondly. There was that time my dad's friend Kevin let me borrow his Porsche and Carl and I went flying down those back-country mile roads. That wide open space can be a blast. <div