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question:Did a landlord ever offer to lower your rent so that you wouldn't leave?
answer:No, but so far I have mostly lived in cities with a noticeable housing shortage. Why should a landlord in Düsseldorf, Berlin (both Germany) or London (UK) do something like this? I am a landlord in the first-mentioned city myself and have no problems finding good tenants. However, a friend was offered cheaper rent once. She had lost her job and the unemployment benefit would not have been sufficient to cover the rent for the apartment. Since she had been living in the apartment for a long time, the landlord then offered her a cheaper rent temporarily, but the city also has vacancies, which means that tenants do not compete for apartments, but apartments for tenants and the area also suffered a bit in quality over her years living there, so finding a good new tenant would have quite likely been a bit of a headache for her landlord. The only time I moved out of an apartment in a smaller city, was to get back to a bigger city, knowing full well that it would double my rent, so there is no incentive by offering a lower rent. In most cases, people also have already secured their new place when the current landlord is made aware of the cancellation, so any such attempts would be rather useless anyway.
question:What rules are to be followed in order to do intraday trading?
answer:Rules. Intraday Trading is risky. So, there is NO 100% win on each and everyday. But can minimise your loss with your risk management.DisciplineMark your demand and supply zones before market start.Watch technical charts with volume.Watch international market/news at the same instance and there price difference with your local market.Let the price come in your demand and supply zones.Mark your entry with volumeDon't forget to mark your STOP LOSSbetter winning with Trailing Stop Loss.Take your reward and enjoy.
question:Why do some dipole antennas use Balun but others do not?
answer:There are two main reasons some dipoles need baluns and some do not. They are: 1.) Sometimes the system needs one, maybe the system very badly needs one, but nobody really knows it does. The performance shortfall is just ignored, and even though the system could be a lot better nobody really knows or cares. There are various levels of gray in the soupy imperfect world of feedlines and antennas. “Need” is relative to where we are in that soup. Sometimes “just okay” is good enough. 2.) Other times transmission line lengths, routing, and grounding are such that a simple transmission line acts like a natural balun. I (and many others) do this intentionally in some antenna designs by grounding a floating coaxial cable 1/4 wave from a balanced feedpoint. There are a number of common myths about baluns and antennas. Here are two common but very wrong myths: 1.) The impedance of a free-space propagating electromagnetic wave has to be matched to a radio or a transmission line, and thus a ~377 ohm feedline does not need a balun. Or a ~377 ohm feedpoint like folded dipole somehow magically couples to free space. 2.) An impedance mismatch causes a system to have unwanted feedline radiation, or common mode current. If the feedline is matched the need a balun is magically reduced. Balun is an acronym for “BALanced” and UNbalanced”. While baluns have an impedance ratio, that impedance ratio and the line mismatch have absolutely nothing to do with the need for a balanced to unbalanced transition. A balun is sometimes a good idea, and sometimes a waste of time. It really depends on the exact system.
question:w can matter be completely destroyed from existence? Someone told me that if we hit the proton with its antimatter, it would go away? Does it expire or turn into energy? Which one is real?
answer:They turn into energy, in the form of high-energy photons, i.e., gamma rays.