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  2. Kronos Foods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kronos_Foods

    Kronos Foods, Inc., is a Chicago-based company which is a foodservice manufacturer of Mediterranean food in the United States and the largest manufacturer of gyros in the world. [1] [2] Kronos Foods is known for being one of the first to produce, standardize, and market gyro cones (an argument exists as to who exactly was the first to "invent ...

  3. Unicru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicru

    Unicru was founded in 1987 as Decision Point Data and is headquartered in Beaverton, Oregon. It acquired two other software companies: Guru.com in 2003 and Xperius (formerly Personic) in 2004. The Guru.com URL and logo were subsequently sold to eMoonlighter.com which now operates under the Guru.com brand. In August 2006, Kronos announced it had ...

  4. Kronos Incorporated - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kronos_Incorporated

    Kronos Incorporated corporate headquarters in Lowell, MA. Kronos was founded in 1977 by Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Simon Business School alumnus Mark S. Ain. [4] Under Mark Ain's leadership, Kronos sustained one of the longest records of growth and profitability as a public company in software industry history. [5]

  5. Kronos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kronos

    Kronos (Highlander), a fictional character. In the Doctor Who serial, The Time Monster, a creature from outside time that feeds on time itself. In the Star Trek universe, another spelling of Qo'noS, the Klingon home world. In Singularity, an artificial intelligence designed to rid the earth of the plague of humanity in order to save the planet.

  6. Gyro International - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyro_International

    Gyro International. Gyro International is a non-profit social, service, and fraternal club for men located in the United States, Canada and Japan. Gyro was founded by Paul Schwan, Clarence (Gus) Handerson, and Edmund (Ed) Kagy, three college friends, in April 1912 in Cleveland, Ohio. The primary purpose of the club is the promotion of fun and ...

  7. Self-service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-service

    Self-service software and self-service apps (for example online banking apps, web portals with shops, self-service check-in at the airport) become increasingly common. Self-sourcing. Self-sourcing is a term describing informal and often unpaid labor that benefits the owner of the facility where it is done by replacing paid labor with unpaid labor.

  8. Self-checkout - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-checkout

    A self-service checkout at a Tesco store in Poland; a barcode scanner is in the glass below the display screen; below this is a flat metal plate on which produce may be weighed; a bank card PIN pad is to the right of the display screen; and to the right is the bagging area. In self-checkout systems, the customer is typically required to:

  9. Drexel Burnham Lambert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drexel_Burnham_Lambert

    I.W. "Tubby" Burnham, a 1931 graduate of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, founded the firm in 1935 as Burnham and Company, a small New York City–based retail brokerage. Burnham started the firm with $100,000 of capital (equivalent to $1.7 million in 2023), $96,000 of which was borrowed from his grandfather Isaac Wolfe ...