0

8 spaces per tab instead of 4

Uy Tran 11 years ago updated by Sven Axelsson 11 years ago 4

When i use tab in sublime it gives me a tab equal to 4 spaces which is what i want. But when i open a file that i made in sublime in another editor like emacs, my tabs are suddenly 8 spaces. The weird thing is that 1 space in sublime is also 1 space in other editors. Also one tab in emacs gives me two spaces in sublime.


So to sum it up:


In Sublime

1 Sublime tab = 4 spaces

1 Text tab = 2 spaces


Pure text:

1 Sublime tab = 8 spaces

1 Text tab = 4 spaces


0

insert sequence of characters ((0,1,2) or (a,b,c) or (x,y,z))

Ferry Taswin 10 years ago 0

I write codes for Computer Graphic which deal with a loth of vectors, matrix, index and coordinates it would be so awesome if I have multiple selections i can insert a sequence of charaters ie:

[ ]

[ ]

[ ]


with multiple selections inside the brackets I can quickly add :

[0]

[1]

[2]


or if you have multiple selection at the end of each word 'button'


'button'

'button'

'button'

'button'


you can turn it into


'button1'

'button2'

'button3'

'button4'


or turning:


'translate'

'translate'

'translate'


into:


'translateX'

'translateY'

'translateZ'



Thanks very much for your consideration


0

Vintage mode missing paragraph selection

Frog 12 years ago 0

Vintage mode seems to be missing "inner paragraph" text objects (though it does have "a paragraph" text object).


e.g. commands like vip, yip should select/yank the paragraph.


In various LaTeX packages, an additional text object "environment" is added (ae/ie) to select the contents between \begin{env} and \end{env}. I can't see obviously how this would be extended, but that'd also be very useful


0

Tech Tips, and Warnings, for Budget Travelers

Anita Holfer 10 years ago 0
If you’re reading this on any device other than a mobile phone, you’re behind the times. If I can’t persuade you to post this piece on Facebook, I’m doomed to irrelevance. And if you want to tweet a complaint about my bad jokes or ask for a restaurant recommendation in Heathrow, I’d better have a round-the-clock team ready to respond.
O.K., so those lessons were intended not for me but for the travel industry types at EyeforTravel’s Social Media and Mobile Strategies for Travel conference, which I attended last week in San Francisco. I did, though, pick up some tips — and a few warnings — about how a budget traveler should maneuver in this fast-changing world.
TIPS
Hold those prices: Several companies allow you to put a no-risk hold on airline tickets for days or weeks for a small fee. If you haven’t heard of this, you most likely will. Robert Brown, the founder of Options Away, one of those companies, said his service’s “call option” will be integrated into more mainstream booking sites within months.
How could it save you money? It’s sort of like insurance: capture a low price before your plans are finalized and take a few days or weeks to decide. If you cancel, you lose only the fee. (If the prices goes down, you save more.) A competitor, Level Skies, has the advantage of allowing you to move the travel dates forward or back one day up until when you finalize your purchase. Their interface, though, needs some work — and there’s no app yet.
Better photo sharing: Have you already traded a heavy SLR camera for your iPhone when you travel, posting your pictures on Facebook and Instagram? Several sites now help you share your experience more elegantly. A new one that officially launched at the conference and should soon be available at the App Store, Tripstr (iPhone only, at least for now), is designed to turn your photos into an appealing record of your trip that others can view and even add to their own “bucket list.” In addition to sharing with others on your Tripstr network, you can share a link through Facebook and email.
Get an emergency interpreter: Google Translate and its automated competitors can be miraculous in everyday situations abroad. But if you really need an interpreter in a difficult situation — when you’re a victim of crime, your travel companion lands in the hospital or you’re just horribly lost, for example, instant, reasonably priced live translation is hard to come by. A new app due out next month, TalkLingo, undercuts established services like VerbalizeIt by charging $1 a minute, without requiring a subscription or package fee. It will offer 200 languages, with interpreters from 20 major ones from Spanish to Swahili, guaranteed to be available within a minute.
Ready to be pushed? Another conference consensus: users will need to seek information less. Instead, phones will know what you want without asking you. That’s an evolution that, in theory, is especially useful for travel. Walking through an unfamiliar city, your phone puts together where you are with what it knows about you and pushes out suggested attractions, historical information, even articles from trusted sources. Budget travelers might be pinged about nearby sales or receive discount offers for the restaurant right across the street. For those of you who find this horrifying, here’s some mild solace: Companies (at least those at the conference) know bothering you unnecessarily is a grave danger for this technology.
Continue reading the main story
There are already apps that do this. Google’s Field Trip, currently available for iPhone and Android, pushes content to you when you’re in the vicinity of a historical site, architectural landmark, shopping area, restaurant or the like. I’ve tried it in New York, where I’ve had some success with it — for example, as I passed near a new Mexican restaurant near my home, a review popped up from Eater.com. (Lots of other trusted and lesser-known sites have their content integrated here, like Zagat, Thrillist and Atlas Obscura; you can customize which ones you hear from.)
The new technology is especially designed for what those in the know (now including me) call “wearables” like Google Glass — which several conference attendees were strutting around with — and the company’s coming smartwatches). But those are likely to stay expensive for quite a while. Budget travelers who want to try it will have to continue to do stare down at their phones and then stuff them back in their pockets for the time being.
It’s not just Field Trip, but other technology that integrates more smoothly into your phone, like Yahoo’s Aviate (in beta for Android) or Google Now — which is part of the Google search app — that is now growing on me. On the morning of my 8 a.m. flight from New York to San Francisco for the conference, my alarm did not go off. About an hour later, my phone let out a single beep, and I somehow woke up and looked. “Time to leave for UA 397,” it read. “Leave by 6:37 AM to arrive at the airport 60 minutes before your flight.” I bolted out of bed, grabbed my bag and hopped in a taxi, barely making the flight and saving a rebooking fee. If I were nit-picking, I’d say it should be smart enough to know I prefer public transportation and ping me an hour earlier, saving me a few more bucks. It’s not as if Google doesn’t know what I do for a living.
Is customer service transitioning to social media? Shashank Nigam, the chief executive of a research and consulting company called SimpliFlying, told an amazing story of a passenger on Turkish Airlines who, frustrated that the flight attendants would not turn down the heat, vented on Facebook via the plane’s free Wi-Fi. Because spots sent from the plane’s IP address are flagged, the airline’s social media team spotted the comment, contacted the pilot, and a compromise was reached. Many other airlines are also responsive on Twitter: KLM, for example, says it responds to 4,500 tweets and Facebook posts a week, in 10 languages and always within an hour.
I asked Mr. Nigam if some companies had perhaps swung too many resources toward their social media response team to the detriment of call centers. “There is an unfair advantage to the connected traveler,” he said. But that’s true only with some companies — and don’t expect miracle solutions. Just having a Twitter team doesn’t instantly make the flood of requests during weather-related cancellations go away, for example. Still, the industry is moving in this direction if you don’t have a Twitter or Facebook account, it can’t hurt to open one just for this purpose — it might end up saving you time and money.
WARNINGS
You are the marketer: If there was one theme conference participants harped on repeatedly, it was that companies are relying less on traditional advertising campaigns and more on recruiting customers to market on their behalf. Mike De Jesus, head of travel for Twitter, noted that the company had counted 640 million conversations about travel. “There are some good opportunities for you as a brand to jump into these conversations,” he told company representatives.
Reviews required? Your social networks — or at least what’s public on them — also help hotels in their efforts to know you before you arrive, allowing them to “delight” you with a personally-tailored surprise. If that appeals, fine — in the places I stay, a clean bathroom is “delight” enough for me.
One presenter caught my ear by noting that hotels can now discover (or hire a company to help discover) which of their guests are frequent reviewers on TripAdvisor, presumably to delight the heck out of them. TripAdvisor says this would be difficult to do, but let’s say it isn’t. Does anyone see a problem here? I see two: 1) If hotels pamper TripAdvisor reviewers, their presumably rave reviews will bias the site’s influential rankings; 2) Nonreviewers become, by default, second-class citizens.
Maintain your independence: Company efforts to create customer loyalty are often bad news for budget travelers — something you already know if you’ve been tempted to book a more expensive flight just to gain miles toward a theoretical free trip on “your” airline. But that’s old news. At the conference, it seemed that companies are now quite keen on having you download their own apps. Those who use airline apps to access digital boarding passes or hotel apps to bypass check-in lines already know that this can be a very good idea. But be aware that companies can use their app to ping you with offers, and hope that as you become accustomed to the app, you’ll use it to book future trips, locking you into their brand instead of doing a broader search on, say, hotels.com. So remember: brand apps for convenience, search apps for booking.
http://www.gogobot.com/westhill-consulting-travel-an-singapore-attraction
https://foursquare.com/westhilltravel

0

Tabs UI (for open files) needs improvement

MusicLessons com Administrator 11 years ago updated by Jacob Gardner 11 years ago 2
I'm almost to the point where I need to start using another editor. Don't get me wrong, I love Sublime Text 2, but the tab management interface is lacking significantly enough where it's affecting my workflow. After I get more than 15 files open (on a large monitor), the UI starts to fall apart. I've currently got 29 files open, and the tabs are unusable because I can't read the file names. Instead I have to use the explorer tree, which takes too much time when you're dealing with a large project. I've also inadvertently closed tabs by accident when the tabs are small, which is a huge pain in the butt when you don't know where the file is.

I recommend doing something like eclipse... only allow a certain number of tabs in the tab bar, and the rest are in a little menu that is accessible from the tab bar.
0

Fewer resources, greater stress, more disasters: Climate change linked to violence among people and societies

luukicerberg 11 years ago 0

A world becoming warmer and experiencing more droughts and other climate-connected disasters is apt to bring about a considerable upsurge in fierce conflicts between individuals as well as whole societies, a major study has revealed.

An analysis of 61 in-depth cases of violence has shown that personal clashes and wider civil conflicts grow considerably in number with significant changes to weather patterns, such as rising temperature and lack of rain, scientists said.

Even fairly modest shifts away from the average lead to noticeable rise in the occurrence of violence, according to the study which theorized that the expected rise of in average world temperatures this century could result in a 50 per cent growth in major violent conflicts such as civil wars.

The scientists suggest that climate shifts, especially rising temperatures, are bound to cause more frequent conflicts over progressively declining natural resources, on top of the physiological impact on people due to hotter weather.

"We need to be cautious here. We do not mean that it is inevitable that further warming in the future will produce more conflict.  We are saying that previous changes in climate -- especially, past temperature increase -- are connected with increasing personal and group disputes," said Marshall Burke of the University of California, Berkeley.

"It is certainly possible that future communities will be more able to deal with severe temperatures than we do today; but we believe that it is risky to just presume that this will be so," said Mr. Burke, one of the authors of the study published in the journal Science.

The study was based on an investigation of the scholastic literature for historical narratives of violent disputes, from individual aggression, such as murder and assaults to greater conflicts such as riots, racial tensions, civil war and even primary declines of civilisations that existed thousands of years back.

Disputes between groups rather than between persons exhibited the clearest link to alterations in the climate, the scientists said, with temperature increases being the most prevalent risk factor -- all of the 27 causes of contemporary societies, for example, established a connection between warmer weather and increase in violence.

"We found that a one standard-deviation shift towards warmer conditions causes personal violence to increase 4 per cent and inter-societal conflicts to grow by 14 per cent," Mr Burke said.

"To appreciate the magnitude of the shift, this sort of increase in temperature is about equal to warming an African nation by 0.4C for a whole year or warming a United States county by 3C for a given month. Although these are moderate changes, they have an immense effect on communities," he said.

"Our findings give inkling to a couple of aspects of the matter that might link climate to conflict. The first is economic shortage. Years of high temperature and severe precipitation cause a degradation of economic conditions, principally in poor countries, and if things turn really bad, desperate people who lack other options might choose to rise up in arms.  This appears to be a major path connecting climate and group conflict in many agricultural communities," he added.

"Simultaneously, exposure to extremely hot temperatures also seems to promote a physiological reaction in how humans interrelate with one another:  People become less trustful, more hostile, and more vicious. It is probable that both of these factors are prime motivators, and we hope that future study will aid in determining which factor applies in which setting," he added.

Solomon Hsiang of Princeton University, another co-author of the research, said that the connection between climate shift and violent dispute is apparent but for now there is no obvious rationalization -- somewhat akin to the link in the 1950s between smoking and lung cancer, which could only be established after many years.

"Presently, there are some suppositions pointing out why the climate might induce conflict. For instance, we know that shifts in climate influence current economic circumstances, particularly in agricultural countries, and studies imply that people are more liable to take up arms when the economy declines, perhaps partly to preserve their livelihoods," Mr Hsiang said.

How social media fuels holiday inflation

Parents are now under pressure to fill summer holidays with activities for their children by the explosion of social media, as claimed by some people.

According to the Future Foundation think-tank, the facility with which people can “post” their vacation pictures and other activities online puts pressure on others to stay in step.

The authors claimed that their data shows time spent on holidays increasing in the last five decades, identifying a particular rise in the amount of time people spend socialising outside their homes, as well as an increase in the variety of activities they get involved in.

The appearance of what they called an “experience economy”, in which the amassing of experience is more important than the accumulation of material things, can be partly explained by the great upsurge in mobile phone users with Internet-linked smartphones, up by 20 per cent since 2010.

The report, entitled “Fifty Years of Summer” and created for the Nectar loyalty card company, said the way families and individuals socialise during summer has also shifted, with 66 per cent saying that barbecuing is the most frequent way to dine with friends; a drastic increase from only 6 per cent in the 1960s.

They also claimed that there is a rising pressure among young people to plan for their summer experience, with more and more of them using spray tans, sun beds and exercise programs to prepare for warm weather.

Source: http://blog.crowncapitalmngt.com/fewer-resources-greater-stress-more-disasters-climate-change-linked-to-violence-among-people-and-societies/


0

Display matches in the "small text" view as lines.

J L 12 years ago updated 12 years ago 0
0

ctrl+shift+forwardslash cursor ends up outsade the TM_COMMENT_END value

atomi 13 years ago 0
<!-- -->${cursor}

cursor should be between the TM_COMMENT_START and TM_COMMENT_END values
0

control+alt+enter should replace all whether or not "Find and Replace" is showing.

Christopher Brown 12 years ago updated 12 years ago 0
So my routine right now is 1) select text, 2) command+alt+f to bring up the find-and-replace bottom-bar, and then 3) control+alt+enter to replace all in my selection. I would like not to have to do step 2 -- it should remember my settings from last time.

(awesome product btw!)


0

Sublime Text is the best thing that ever happened for open-source programmers.

Abdullah Hasan 10 years ago 0
I have no idea how i ever survived programming without this absolutely, amazingly, incredibly powerful tool.

Sublime Text is in a league of its own when comparing text editors to each other Just a week of use will get you addicted for life!
0

10 of The Best Resataurants in Edinburgh

Ivy Corley 10 years ago 0
There's no need to settle for generic, touristy restaurants in Edinburgh. Food blogger Jonathan Jones's favourites are an eclectic mix but all have fine food to shout about

The Ship on the Shore
Many tourists head to Leith to visit the Royal Yacht Britannia but many neglect to stop at The Shore. That's a shame as this area by the water is home to some 10 of the best restaurants Edinburgh's most welcoming and best quality restaurants. The Ship on the Shore focuses on seafood, with the catch of the day joined by a host of regulars, including a mean seafood chowder. If the sight of water isn't enough to perk up the seafarer inside you then surely the nautical maps along the wall will. Try a bowl of steamed Shetland mussels – they'll provide you with an enduring memory of this fine City.

Castle Terrace Restaurant
This is the sister restaurant to Edinburgh's Michelin-starred The Kitchin. Enjoy a drink in the bar or, even better, wait to be invited down to the chef's table, which overlooks Dominic Jack's kitchen – although seeing the preparation of the beautiful food makes choosing a dish even harder. Perhaps put your faith in the Surprise Tasting Menu (£60), from which the pistachio souffle lingers long in the memory. Inside the dining room patches of purple puncture calming neutral tones – this is a place where whole evenings pass with ease.

Ondine
Ondine has been a breath of fresh air for Edinburgh's seafood scene. After opening in late 2009, it soon picked up a host of awards for the near-perfect manner in which the locally sourced seafood is prepared. Work your way through the oysters, feast on the sea bream curry or push the boat out and try the roast shellfish platter. Huge glass windows provide views of Edinburgh's old town, while the silver-topped horseshoe bar provides an impressive internal focal point. Post meal, go for a nightcap in the stylish bar of the Missoni Hotel next door.

La Favourita
La Favorita is a modern pizzeria, with black-topped tables and whitewashed walls. In recent years, owner Tony Crolla has expanded his brand to include a takeaway fleet of Mini Coopers and a mobile van, complete with a log-fired pizza oven. Yet it is the original restaurant on Leith Walk that continues to offer what is surely Edinburgh's best pizza, with their thin crispy bases and superb quality ingredients. That said, overlooking La Favorita's pasta and regularly changing specials would be unfair; their saltimbocca is superb.



Wedgwood
When this restaurant opened four years ago it sent out a clear message that on Edinburgh's touristy Royal Mile you could still find seriously good restaurants with seriously interesting menus. Many a business in this historic location would be tempted to bask in their success; maybe put their feet up and watch the tourist money roll in. Not Wedgwood; its pigeon served with haggis, neeps and tatties is as unusual as it is delicious. Try to avoid being seated downstairs, as the natural light of the street-level dining room is where you will enjoy this inventive and innovative experience the most.

Kweilin
While its decor is traditional – paintings of China adorn the walls and paper lanterns hang from the ceiling – Kweilin's food is spectacular. The wafer paper prawns are the best I've ever eaten and the eight treasures duck – a breast of braised duck buried deep in various fish and meats – is an all-time favourite. Monkfish, halibut and lobster all make appearances on the seafood-heavy menu. The prices might be a little higher than your average Chinese restaurant but then so is the quality of food.

The Grain Store
When eating out in Edinburgh it's not unreasonable to expect the very best Scottish meat and fish. The Grain Store consistently delivers, with its venison, beef and lamb never failing to impress. The upstairs setting sums up all that is great about Edinburgh: an intimate dining room, moody lighting, bare-brick walls and views of picture-perfect Victoria Street. The three-course lunch for £15 has been running for a long time and offers superb value.

The Honours
Martin Wishart's in Leith is probably Edinburgh's best outright restaurant (with a correspondingly expensive menu and long waiting list to match). So there was much anticipation before the Michelin-starred chef opened this classic brasserie. The interior is lined with marble, huge mirrors and grand lampshades bathing the interior in a golden hue. The menu has depth, appeal and grabs your interest in a way many newcomers cannot: there are surely few restaurants where you can start with a pressed pigs head terrine and end with an ice-cream sundae. The Honours has 70 covers and there will be few nights when all are not taken.

Dusit
Dusit is a Thai restaurant a notch or two above the norm. Situated on quirky Thistle St, it rubs shoulders with champagne bars and designer boutiques. It simply doesn't do disappointing dishes but you'll be most mesmerised if you order anything with scallops, king prawns or monkfish. For meat lovers, some dishes can be ordered with venison, providing a Scottish twist to classic Thai recipes.

Sushiya
This small restaurant has been satisfying sushi cravings for as long as I can remember but as its popularity has risen so has the competition for seats. Through the huge front window you'll see diners perched on stools; food competing for space on cramped tables and a sushi chef working his magic at the rear. No wonder Sushiya has a buzz similar restaurants lack. Enjoy a selection of the excellent salmon and tuna sushi, then follow with the delicious soup-based udon (noodles).



0

Watch Folder | File Library

Michael Merline 12 years ago updated 12 years ago 0
Library functionality, somewhat like what Notational Velocity offers, would be extremely useful. In particular, I'd like the ability to quickly search for and open text files (preferably via the command pallet) from a "watch" folder as designated by the user.
0

html/php mode editing bugs

Roman Gamanov 12 years ago 0

Does not work in html/php mode "strong, tab" whe text is selected, normally before it would neste selected text in "strong" tag. Then also in html/php mode, "php, tab" inside another "<?php ?>" do not do "?> <?php" as it was before, thank you!

0

"This version has expired..."

Andreas Arnold 11 years ago updated by Timm 11 years ago 1

Hey there,

I'm using Sublime Text 2 to create my master's thesis in LaTeX. I fell in love with sublime text, and I wanted to buy a licence in the next days. But today there was a message, that my version has exipred and I should download a new version. And it did not open again. THIS IS A NOGO!!! I will not buy a licence. I will switch back to Aquamacs as Text Editor.

Regards, Andreas

0

CTRL-W Delete the word before the cursor

karl arvin almario 12 years ago updated by 11 years ago 2
this is one of my used commands in vim, this is very useful on the vintage mode for the vim power users  

description
*i_CTRL-W*CTRL-WDelete the word before the cursor (see |i_backspacing| aboutjoining lines).  See the section "word motions",|word-motions|, for the definition of a word.

0

Error trying to parse workspace: Expected value in ~/myproject:142:29

Côme de Percin 13 years ago updated 13 years ago 2
OS => Linux UBUNTU 10.10
SublimeText2 version : Build 2039
Culture : fr_FR

when i want to switch from one project to another, sometimes, this error append

Error trying to parse workspace: Expected value in ~/myproject:142:29

and i can't access to myproject.

The solution is to open the project file (line 142 for me)
"translation.y": 1962,5,
replace with
"translation.y": 1962,


maybe it's a culture problem, my decimal separator may be "," instead of "." i don't know :)

Anyway, ST2 is a great product ! i love it ;)
0

Microsoft Word Auto Correct

doctorguile 11 years ago 0

i use sublime for both code and prose.


i love microsoft word's auto correct feature, although it sucks as a general editor.


basically if you have been typing a lot you might develop carpal tunnel. and when writing documents or emails, microsoft's auto correct saves you from using the shift key to capitalize the first word and you dont have to type a lot of punctuation except commas and fullstops. 


for example, if you type this in word


i dont have a lot to say about taht, but waht you said is ok.


you get


I don’t have a lot to say about that, but what you said is ok.


it does a fine job of saving you from pressing the stressful keys and also correct a lot of common errors when you're typing fast.


you can also easily export the auto correction list from word


Image 199


if this can be done in a package, it would be okay as well.

thoughts?


0

Westhill Property on China's Investment Boom in London Real Estate Is Poised To Continue

Charley Cole 10 years ago 0
Source: google plus community

Growing Chinese interest in investing abroad was a top global business trend in 2013. London, which has of late attracted investors ranging from Greater China billionaires Wang Jianlin and Henry Cheng to mainland government-run giant Greenland Holding Group-, is poised to gain even more funds in the coming years.

That’s according to Stephen Clifton, head of Central London for Knight Frank, one of the world’s largest independent real estate consultancies. Chinese investors purchased £1.2 billion of London real estate last year alone, amid a revival in demand for office space in central London, where take-up increased by 41% to 13.1 million square feet in 2013. Overall investment volume for the central London office market hit a record high of £19.6 billion last year, an increase of 42% from 2012, and 14% greater than the next highest year, which was 2007. Supply fell from 16.5 million square feet in 2012 to 16.1 million square feet at the end of 2013. This reflects a vacancy rate of 7.0%, which is below the 10-year average figure of 8.5%, and the lowest level since 2008.

Clifton expects in the coming years Chinese investors will add more commercial real estate in London. That would make them well-poised to benefit from what Knight Frank predicts will be record high rents in the city by 2018. I exchanged with Clifton last week about the outlook.

Q. Knight Frank is predicting record levels of overseas investment in London commercial property in the coming years. Of late, U.S. companies such as Google and Facebook have been expanding in London. How do you think China will figure in the market in the coming years?

A. Despite yield compression over the last 12 months, London remains good value in global terms. Factoring in currency fluctuations, prime City of London capital values are 40% lower than the 2007 peak for investors buying in renminbi. Additionally, commercial lease lengths in Central London tend to be longer than in many of the major far eastern cities, with prime yields up to 125 basis points higher, making the city particularly attractive. Our China office is currently tracking 40 Chinese institutions and property companies looking to invest up to $100 million overseas. We expect a large proportion of this to target London.

Additionally, a growing number of Chinese companies are acquiring occupational office space in Central London. We are aware of more than 30 Chinese companies or institutions occupying space in London, the largest being Bank of China, which purchased its 110,000 square foot headquarters building next to the Bank of England in 2009, more than doubling its London presence.

Q. Thinking only about real estate, to what extent has mainland developers and investors figured into the growth in investment in London property? Besides the big, well-publicized Wanda project, what other commitments have you seen in the past year?

A. There has already been significant Chinese investment in London real estate; in 2013 alone £1.2 billion of Chinese money flowed into London property. Chinese investors have targeted Grade A, well-located buildings across Central London, and not just large lot sizes. While transactions such as Gingko Tree’s purchase of Ropemaker Place for almost £500 million and Ping An’s purchase of the Lloyds Building for more than £250 million have made the headlines, we have also seen a number of assets traded at £50 million or below.

Q. Looking to 2018, do you expect more mainland real estate money to enter? How so — from real estate developers? financial investors? Why type of projects are mainland investors likely to be interested in the coming years and why?

A. We see property companies and institutions targeting London and they will consider a wide range of asset types and projects. The occupational market has seen an exceptional recovery since the global financial crisis. In 2013 alone, there was 13.6 million square feet of office space acquired by Central London tenants, a 41% increase on the previous year, and we expect levels to continue to rise alongside the ongoing economic recovery. At the same time, the supply of office space is falling. We see opportunities for Chinese investors in both the acquisition of well-located, long-let, quality stock and also in joint ventures.

Q. Hong Kong has long had relatively close ties to London, and its entrepreneurs have been investing in real estate far longer than the mainland’s. What’s ahead for Hong Kong’s investment in London in the next few years?

A. Hong Kong investors have long been comfortable with investing in London; we share similar regulations and legal systems and Sterling offers an important diversification from U.S. dollar investments. Many Hong Kong property investors are no longer first-time investors in Central London, and we see good opportunities for the more confident investor in assets other than the traditional prime.

Q. How much opportunity is growing interest in London real estate among Hong Kong and mainland investors creating for your own businesses at Knight Frank?

A. Knight Frank employs 640 people in Greater China and we are continuing to grow our Shanghai, Beijing and Hong Kong offices. We see Hong Kong and mainland investment in London as an important part of our business going forward.
0

BOOKLIKES - Westhill Consulting Business Consultant and Trainors

Damir Pavla 10 years ago 0
CONSULTANTS AND TRAINERS
Krzysztof Filarski
Professionally for 11 years dealing with business psychology. As a social psychologist (KUL), also have a degree in management and marketing. For 3 years I worked as a consultant for the prevention of psychological manipulation. Then - specializing in business - I worked as a specialist for sales support and IT. I dealt with the marketing in the School of Management Personnel, where he was also a lecturer HR specialist subjects. For 2 years I was a manager for the development consulting firm. Experience in customer service I gained as a consultant to companies in the aviation industry, banking and pharmaceutical industries. I run a consultancy projects (implementation of SOK, coaching and DC, projects implementation and evaluation of the effectiveness of staff development projects) and training for employees and managers mainly customer service departments. Realized a total of more than half a thousand days of training and advisory services. I am also a lecturer at the School of Banking in Poznan. I have a certified coach INTRA BUSINESS. I specialize in project management in the field of coaching and organizational change management. I am a member of the Polish Human Resources Management Association. In the years 2010 - 2012 as an interim manager at DB SCHENKER, I carried a fragment of activities outsourced company Westhill.
Privately
run extremely healthy lifestyle, I exercise several times a week. I read fantasy books - my goal is in life to read all those that are available on the Polish market. I love to visit European cities with my lovely wife. I am the father of a tiny miracle Emilia. Archery and air gun. I am open to unusual discipline if they are associated with the movement. Features for which the closest to me is common sense, faith and ethics - both in business and in private life. We are happy to discuss about society, religion, entrepreneurship, balance work / life and ... laziness.
Mariusz Siechowicz
Professionally,
I am a coach, certified by the ICC. I feel like an ambassador for the needs of clients and therefore I am building for several years, and I support others in the building, partner relationship with customers. For many years I worked in corporations such as ING, or Medicover coaching and dealing with customer service. I worked as a salesman, sales team coordinator, Senior customer service, trainer and coach internal specialist standards of customer service, sales manager. I've had a successful implementation of the draft standards of customer service and coaching in the biggest Polish companies. I have a certificate "Train the Trainers", so prepare coaches and trainers to support internal projects implemented. I worked on behalf of the Polish Government. I moved about 100 training under the campaign to support the implementation of the pension reform. I work actively in the non-profit organization. I am one of the founders of the branch of AIESEC, an Honorary Member of the Chamber of Commerce of Radom, a founding member of the Chamber of Coaching and Club Coach.
Personally
I love the mountains. Explores them in different ways: skiing, biking, gaining new heights. I like clear and ambitious goals, which is why I became a member of the Club Crown Winners of Polish Mountains. Cars. An amazing invention made hammock. Arouse strong emotions in me. My dream is to become a test driver. I like to laugh and spend a lot of time ago: I visit the places where I meet people who know that laughter is a serious matter. If you have a moment, I invite you to watch my favorite sketch cabaret . I love to spend time actively. Increasingly difficult to find me a sport that has not yet practiced. I'm fascinated by exploring interesting places, touching other cultures. I like getting lost in places that have a soul. And with the help of the camera to stop those moments in time. My core value is respect for others. I want you to be treated with respect, whenever you meet with the staff of customer service. It's my mission in life.
Arkadiusz Siechowicz
Professionally,
I am a graduate of law at Catholic University and postgraduate studies at LKAEM them. Kozminski in the field of Management in Human Beings in the Company. For over nine years I specialize in comprehensive supporting organizations and people working in them. I made a complex organizational change projects for various institutions such as the Mercedes-Benz Poland and Starostwo county in Bochnia. For nearly three years I worked in London, including the position Manager for the management and allocation of human potential in an international consulting and information technology. I was co-responsible, among others. for implementing the program of coaching across the organization, as well as coordinating the annual assessment interviews and bonus system. Also in the UK, I was a member of the team coordinating the biggest project of international recruitment in Europe, featured, among others. by the Financial Times and Personnel Today. I am a certified coach - training in this area, I had, among others, at Richmond upon Thames College in London, completing a certified course with coaching skills accredited by the Institute of Leadership and Management. I am a member of the International Association of Coaches, and Toastmasters International. I also had the pleasure to be a finalist in the national competition Presentation Master, and to be twice awarded the title of 'Best Speaker' at Olympians Toastmaster Club in London. I dealt with the sale of products B2B in the Polish branch of one of the world's largest consulting - training. I specialize in projects in the field of leadership, at the same time I complete and I develop training projects Westhill companies in advanced areas of building relationships with clients and executive coaching. For 3 years I am lecturer at the School of Banking in Poznan, lecturing specialized items managerial (also MBA). I run a training and coaching in Polish and English. In the years 2010 - 2012 as an interim manager at DB SCHENKER, I carried the main area of activities outsourced company Westhill - managing the development of the company's employees.
Privately
passionate me all kinds of ideas, especially those that relate to improving the way we live. I love to watch an outstanding and unusual social activists, academics and entrepreneurs at TED.com. I admire people who dedicate themselves to a particular work for others, especially those most in need. He often organize people around the idea of joint action. In his spare time, which is still not enough, lead nights of talking, watching good movies, or spend wonderful moments with my daughter. 'm Interested in the culture, I had the pleasure of staying in 4 countries and work with representatives of 30 nationalities. Many of the knowledge contained manages to maintain.

Agata Rozbicka
professionally
for 10 years I have worked for industry training - research. I graduated in sociology at the University of Warsaw. I received a scholarship to the University of Pittsburgh in the U.S.. His professional career started at Millward Brown SMG KRC to a specialist for qualitative research. He carried out research projects for companies in the FMCG sector and the public sector. Training activities started implementing the strategies developed in the research as an external consultant. I completed a degree in psychology and coaching in the Gestalt Institute, School of Business Trainers INTRA and a number of dedicated training. Implemented several training projects: implementation of the standards of customer service, sales, managerial skills development, coaching, motivating and managing potential employees. I also have to account the implementation of HR systems, Development Center and workshops devoted to human resource management in the company. I run workshops and presentation communication skills. I treat every project as a new challenge and everyone really motivates me to work. Specific when I think about the specific development needs of the participants. I worked with the industries: financial, automotive, sports, IT, real estate development, furniture and FMCG. I have experience working in a large EU projects to 1.5 million budget. This year I start work as a lecturer at WSB in Chorzow.
Privately
12 years to climb and it is very much defines my world. I like mountains, nature, silence, and strong challenges ;) often setting off on long journeys, where most tourist industry does not reach. I have to his credit a number of interesting excursions. Last diving on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, trekking in 5000 above sea level in the Peruvian Cordillera, meeting with teachers of yoga in the Indian Himalayas. Always, over the years, accompanied me on this camera. Besides, I love the simple life - cooking good meals, reading books with daughters on the terrace, long drink coffee in the morning, welcoming visitors. I enjoy spending time with children, I like to write, I like to bury in the ground in the garden, I like .. sew :-) I like that about myself, I think it's probably just ... I really appreciate free time.

WESTHILL CONSULTING
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Find in files: editing directly the results window

aristidesfl 12 years ago updated by Thomas Jachmann 11 years ago 1

Sometimes I wish it was possible to edit files directly in the Find in files result window.