Admiral Beez
Superstar
No connection, it's complete and in use.I doubt it will effect the pedestrian tunnel though.
Why did the UT drop the separate Porter Airlines thread and merge in into this tunnel titled one?
No connection, it's complete and in use.I doubt it will effect the pedestrian tunnel though.
Still there:No connection, it's complete and in use.
Why did the UT drop the separate Porter Airlines thread and merge in into this tunnel titled one?
Yes, but discussions on Porter Airlines may have nothing to do with the specifics of the pedestrian tunnel project.
And what's with all the silly ?m notations throughout the thread titles here? Is that supposed to refer to the spend? If so, m or more commonly M refers to thousands, MM refers to millions.
Someone is overthinking this forum too far, IMO.
Yeah where do we talk about Vaughan's election night swagger where he (metaphorically) gives the middle finger to Porter and (without saying so) reminds people that he's gonna be a cabinet minister?
2 most common notations I've seen are k for thousands, M for millions (metric, m is for thousandths) or mn for million, bn for billion. M for thousands, MM for millions seems very confusing. Who uses that?
ETA: the ?m is their notation for non-buildings re: height. Still not needed, but not spend-related.
2 most common notations I've seen are k for thousands, M for millions (metric, m is for thousandths) or mn for million, bn for billion. M for thousands, MM for millions seems very confusing. Who uses that?
ETA: the ?m is their notation for non-buildings re: height. Still not needed, but not spend-related.
We were discussing this at work the other day. MM has been millions in my career and M is thousands (it is from the roman numerals M being thousand and MM being 1000 thousands = M).....since we deal mostly in millions, confusion used to be dealt with by, for example, calling 500,000 by .5MM. We are, however, going through a bit of a generational change in our industry as younger folks come along and they are less likely to have been trained/brought up using roman shortfalls and are using k as thousands and m as millions.
Old habits are hard to break and when they see reports/memos written by folks of my generation they get, either confused or a bit uppity thinking they have caught someone in a mistake.
We finance real estate.TOF, I'm almost 50(!) and I had never heard of the Roman numeral configuration explanation (although occasionally I had seen it used). I've always used metric notation. What industry are you in? I'm in investments, and although I use metric, I see mn/bn, or tables with notation at the top of the columns (i.e. $'000s for thousands or $ millions).
I'm in construction product sales/marketing mgmt. I'm 44 years old, and have been in consumer and commercial product sale/marketing for over 20 years now. Throughout my career MM has always been millions, M has always been thousands. K stands for Kilo, which is why I suspect metric people use it for thousand. However in financial reporting I've never seen it used. Mind you, in all my years, we've used imperial feet over metres.We finance real estate.