User:Apdevries
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Contents |
[edit] Pages I created
- David Norgrove
- Forecasting
- Mark Edwards (disambiguation)
- Mark Edwards, British businessman
- St Nicholas Church, Thames Ditton
- Frank Bass
- Bass diffusion model
- Lapponian herder
[edit] Pages I contributed to substantially
- Paul Geroski, and his book Fast second
- Hampton Court Bridge
- Finnish Lapphund, member of the Spitz family
- Business dynamics, the book by John Sterman
- Fast second
- Experience curve effects
- System Dynamics
[edit] Pages I made some changes to
- London Business School
- Symbian
- Symbian OS
- Thames Ditton
- Thames Ditton Island
- Predictive analytics
- coat (dog)
- Merged Second-mover advantage with First mover advantage
- Experience curve effects
- Roman roads in Britain
[edit] Pages I'd like to work on in future
- Product forecasting
- Merge Diffusion (business) with Diffusion_of_innovations
- Returns to scale
- Prediction
[edit] Useful Wikipedia shortcuts
- Category:Infobox_templates
- Template_talk:Cite_book
- Wikipedia:Citing sources, and Wikipedia:Citing sources#How to ask for citations
- Help:Math
[edit] Subpages
- User:Apdevries/System dynamics
- User:Apdevries/Bass diffusion formula
- User:Apdevries/Hampton Court Bridge
[edit] Tip of the day
| Tip of the day...
One problem that often occurs when building a complex table-based page, is that glitches show up on the page when viewed in other browsers, even though the page looks fine in the browser you used to build it. This problem is most prevalent when using new generation browsers and then viewing with Internet Explorer. Once the page is built, it can be very time-consuming to track down the bug, and may be faster to rebuild the page from scratch using IE, rather than spend time bug hunting. To prevent this problem, build the page using IE. If a page views properly in IE, then the chances are greater that it will display properly in other browsers, rather than the other way around. Read more: Help:Table |

