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Posted

post-2696-0-55381900-1513845027_thumb.jpg

 

Day 20: The Twin Jet Nebula. Situated about 4,000 light-years from Earth, PN M2-9 is a striking example of a bipolar planetary nebula. Bipolar planetary nebulae are formed when the central object is not a single star, but a binary system. Studies have shown that the nebula’s size increases with time, and measurements of this rate of increase suggest that the stellar outburst that formed the lobes occurred just 1,200 years ago.

 

*one of the more famous hubble images*

 

 

Posted

"Bushidō is a Japanese collective term for the many codes of honour and ideals that dictated the samurai way of life, loosely analogous to the concept of chivalry in Europe."

 

svMqifL.jpg

 

fqdkkA3.jpg

 

eFT6NLH.jpg

 

9us4vDA.jpg

 

"In 2006, Japan Airlines began suffering financial hardships despite being Asia’s leading airline in terms of revenue. Nishimatsu knew that cut-backs and layoffs would be necessary, so he chose to eliminate all of his corporate perks as a CEO to start. When Japan Airlines eventually had to lay off employees and force others into early retirement, Nishimatsu took a pay cut that had him earning less than the company’s pilots made — in 2007, Nishimatsu, the then-CEO of the world’s tenth-largest airline, made only $90,000. Unfortunately, like several other airlines during the global recession, Japan Airlines was forced to file for bankruptcy and Nishimatsu resigned in 2010."

 

https://nextshark.com/former-japan-airlines-ceo-reminds-us-of-what-a-great-boss-should-really-be-like/

 

Just thought it's a good story to share.

 

Posted

"Bushidō is a Japanese collective term for the many codes of honour and ideals that dictated the samurai way of life, loosely analogous to the concept of chivalry in Europe."

 

svMqifL.jpg

 

fqdkkA3.jpg

 

eFT6NLH.jpg

 

9us4vDA.jpg

 

"In 2006, Japan Airlines began suffering financial hardships despite being Asia’s leading airline in terms of revenue. Nishimatsu knew that cut-backs and layoffs would be necessary, so he chose to eliminate all of his corporate perks as a CEO to start. When Japan Airlines eventually had to lay off employees and force others into early retirement, Nishimatsu took a pay cut that had him earning less than the company’s pilots made — in 2007, Nishimatsu, the then-CEO of the world’s tenth-largest airline, made only $90,000. Unfortunately, like several other airlines during the global recession, Japan Airlines was forced to file for bankruptcy and Nishimatsu resigned in 2010."

 

https://nextshark.com/former-japan-airlines-ceo-reminds-us-of-what-a-great-boss-should-really-be-like/

 

Just thought it's a good story to share.

Pity he can't become my new CEO. We wouldn't need any more bail outs.

Posted

Pity he can't become my new CEO. We wouldn't need any more bail outs.

"Unfortunately, like several other airlines during the global recession, Japan Airlines was forced to file for bankruptcy and Nishimatsu resigned in 2010."

 

​Not sure why you want a CEO that can't get a company through a recession. He might be a nice guy, and his approach might have been novel, but he didnt manage to save the business and the thousands of jobs that went with it....

Posted

"Unfortunately, like several other airlines during the global recession, Japan Airlines was forced to file for bankruptcy and Nishimatsu resigned in 2010."

 

​Not sure why you want a CEO that can't get a company through a recession. He might be a nice guy, and his approach might have been novel, but he didnt manage to save the business and the thousands of jobs that went with it....

Wanted him more for the fact that he reduced his pay. This place pays the big bosses way too much. Just by looking at the cars in their designated parking lot I can tell they over paid.

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