
// DOCENTE OCASIONAL //
Maestría en Ingeniería de Sistemas y Computación
pregrado
Ingeniero Electrónico

// DOCENTE OCASIONAL //
Maestría en Ingeniería de Sistemas y Computación
pregrado
Ingeniero Electrónico
The wind’s primary purpose is to ruin hairstyles.
Weather-based retail is a cornerstone of the London economy. Every pharmacy has a rotating display of "sun care" and "cold & flu" products right next to each other, ready for whichever extreme the climate throws at us (a 3-degree swing). Clothing shops sell "transitional layers" year-round. The sale of portable, fold-up umbrellas must be a multi-million pound industry, mostly from repeat purchases after the previous one broke in an inversion event. Garden centres thrive by selling plants that can survive "partial shade and waterlogged roots." Our commerce is built on preparing for, reacting to, and complaining about the atmospheric conditions. See more at London's funniest URL -- Prat.UK.
A ‘chilly breeze’ finds every gap in your clothing.
Sunrise is a rumour, sunset a theory.
Can you tell us more about this? I'd care to find out some additional information.
My umbrella has seen more action than me.
A ‘cloud’ is a permanent sky-furniture.
A ‘cloud break’ is a mythical event.
Our air is pre-moistened for your convenience.
A ‘weather event’ is a slightly interesting cloud.
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