Monday, April 12, 2021

Don’t Make These Mistakes When Cleaning Upholstery

Hello friends

I recently purchased an expensive couch and it has changed the entire look of my living room. Upholstery items can elevate the look and appeal of any room plus they provide comfort. But, they can get dirty quickly since most are placed in common areas of the house. To have spotless and maintained upholstery items in your home, knowing how to care for them is essential. You can hire professional cleaners to deep clean them. Additionally, you should understand common mistakes to avoid making when cleaning upholstery furniture and fixtures. To know more, here is an article you should read.

https://www.bondcleaning.sydney/dont-make-these-mistakes-when-cleaning-upholstery/



Sydney family shocked in disastrous custom home mix-up

 A Sydney family has been left in shock after discovering the home they sunk over $700,000 into over a decade of saving was half of what they were expecting.


Nepalese man Bishnu Aryal, who moved to Australia and saved for a deposit on a $398,950 block of land in Edmonson Park, couldn’t believe his eyes when he realised his dream home was quite literally cut down the middle.


Mr Aryal – who speaks English as a second language – employed the services of Zac Homes for a custom off-plan build worth $322,400 in 2016 and let the business get to work, saying he “trusted the process”.


https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/home/sydney-family-shocked-in-disastrous-custom-home-mixup/news-story/967d768af8b611df046cda29b8f7f14b



Sydney student helps solve quantum computing problem with simple modification

 Sydney university student Pablo Bonilla, 21, had his first academic paper published overnight and it might just change the shape of computing forever.


Key points:

Pablo Bonilla's code has caught the interest of researchers at US universities and tech giant Amazon

The code is a small modification to one that has been studied for 20 years

Mr Bonilla completed HSC-level maths at age 15 and was invited to work on a University of Sydney project

As a second-year physics student at the University of Sydney, Mr Bonilla was given some coding exercises as extra homework and what he returned with has helped to solve one of the most common problems in quantum computing. 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-04-13/sydney-university-student-solves-quantum-computing-problem/100064328