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I inherited half of my dad's IRA that was managed by a buddy of mine for 20ish years. All his positions were transferred over to me and good god, it's like looking into an investment time machine. Surprised there's no Standard Oil, Amalgamated Steel or Titanic Boat Makers, Inc.
I inherited half of my dad's IRA that was managed by a buddy of mine for 20ish years. All his positions were transferred over to me and good god, it's like looking into an investment time machine. Surprised there's no Standard Oil, Amalgamated Steel or Titanic Boat Makers, Inc.
I inherited half of my dad's IRA that was managed by a buddy of mine for 20ish years. All his positions were transferred over to me and good god, it's like looking into an investment time machine. Surprised there's no Standard Oil, Amalgamated Steel or Titanic Boat Makers, Inc.
I inherited half of my dad's IRA that was managed by a buddy of mine for 20ish years. All his positions were transferred over to me and good god, it's like looking into an investment time machine. Surprised there's no Standard Oil, Amalgamated Steel or Titanic Boat Makers, Inc.
I inherited half of my dad's IRA that was managed by a buddy of mine for 20ish years. All his positions were transferred over to me and good god, it's like looking into an investment time machine. Surprised there's no Standard Oil, Amalgamated Steel or Titanic Boat Makers, Inc.
a friend gave my daughter two shares of Disney stock when she was born. When she was 12 (now 25), overly obsessed with money and managing her own bank account, she found an uncashed dividend check for around $1 and deposited it. Check was like 5 years old. Bank charged her $10 for depositing an expired check. Of course not Disney's fault but she vowed revenge, declared through tears she would someday "steal something from Disney". We still joke about it.
I don't understand, it is often used when it is not the correct choice. It is like chasing quarterly profits. It allows the easy development, but then trying to get your data and/or build reports on it in the future is a pain compared to it's competitors.
I don't understand, it is often used when it is not the correct choice. It is like chasing quarterly profits. It allows the easy development, but then trying to get your data and/or build reports on it in the future is a pain compared to it's competitors.
I don't understand, it is often used when it is not the correct choice. It is like chasing quarterly profits. It allows the easy development, but then trying to get your data and/or build reports on it in the future is a pain compared to it's competitors.
Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle SQL, PostgreSQL, and MySQL would be the alternatives that I would choose 90% of the time to MongoDB. However if in the nosql world there are a few competitors as well, but going with MongoDB due to popularity would probably make sense over something like Apache CouchDB.
I am a product manager as well and my applications use multiple different database technologies, I even integrate with a MongoDB, however for that app, mongoDB was 100% the wrong choice, and only reason it was chosen was because the developers wanted to pad their resume. They saw that MongoDB was a popular sought after skill and wanted to use it so they could improve their resume.
There were tens of millions invested taking that data and converting it to a SQL format and then hosting the data on other servers.
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