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Source channel @olddriverGDstudy · Post #29 · Mar 17

搜索使用说明 #搜索指南 因为电报软件对中文搜索支持不好,大队特别对队内资源搜索进行了整理汇集,使用方法说明如下: 1.1 原理: 电报对中文搜索支持不佳,汉字只有在前后含有asic码字符的前提下可以被正确搜索出,如 _广州修车大队_ (“_”指代空格)、(广州修车大队);等形式可以搜索“广州修车大队”搜索出相关信息;搜索“广州”等未被asic码间隔的汉字无法正确显示。 为正确搜索,在编制频道资源时,对重要信息可以采取Hashtag的形式已方便搜索,即以"#"字符开头,接汉字,以“空格字符”结尾的形式,点击一个hashtag即可快速定位该频道或聊天群内所有相同标签,建议所有管理在编辑重要资料包括ls信息、广播台、学习频道时正确使用hashtag。 !!注意标签不要随意编写,要参考搜索指南中有的标签类型!! 1.2 JS资源定位: JS目前支持 Hasgtag(#K老师)、数字标签(#GZ003)的搜索方式,在对应榜单和报告区中试用上述方式均可查找到JS的相关信息。 使用举例:在“广州公开榜”或“广州修车大队”的搜索栏中输入 #K老师 或 #GZ003,均可定位到K老师资料页;在报告区的搜索栏中输入#K老师 或 #GZ003,均可定位到K老师的验证报告。这两者是快速了解JS基本信息和评价的便捷办法。 1.3 标签查找 公榜榜单目前均支持标签查找,可以快速定位某种类型或地区的所有JS,目前仅支持Hashtag查找,目前常用标签解释如下: 地区标签: 一定要使用一级标签,例如 #天河区(注意不要有错别字) #颜值: 不解释 #服务: 评价中92、95的,有场子出身花式水平的,均会归入此类; #大胸: 不解释,一般D以上归入此类; #长腿: 不解释,一般168以上归入此类; #身材: 不解释,较为宽松; #嫩妹: 22岁以下或者长相很嫩的,白小纯的,loli系的,cos系的归入此类; #熟女: 30岁以上风韵犹存的,归入此类; #特服: 提供3p、3t、wt、字母等特殊服务的JS归入此类。 使用举例:在红榜的搜索栏中输入 #长腿,可以快速查看“莉贝伦”等8位长腿JS。 类型标签评价目前非常主观,有不妥之处请队内私信 JackJack 或其他管理人员修改。 1.4 资料查找 目前学习频道中试用hashtag来快速定位资料,目前使用的标签有如下几种: #安全CJ#素质CJ#卫生CJ #搜索指南 #大队玩法 #语录#秀哥语录 #技巧#知识

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Туризм 360✈️🏔

@julia_koshurnikova · Post #361 · 11/16/2025, 03:59 PM

Завтра у меня вебинар в Moscow Business School “Продажи в туризме: как масштабировать бизнес без увеличения штата» 17.11.2025 19:00 (по мск) Куда я вас и приглашаю🙌 #туризм360#вебинары#MBS#МБШ#обучение

Marwa Osman/MidEaStream

@Marwa_OsmanLB · Post #3965 · 02/04/2025, 04:38 AM

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman received the appointed Syrian President Abu Mohamad al-Jawlani and his accompanying delegation upon his arrival at Al-Yamamah Palace in the Saudi capital, Riyadh. This was al-Jawlani’s first trip abroad since ousting the former regime. #Syria#SaudiArabia#Riyadh#MBS#AlJawlani

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5258 · 03/01/2026, 10:59 PM

🛢 MBS, Bibi and the President With “No Imminent Threat” Trump’s Iran war didn’t start in the Situation Room. It started on the phone with Mohammed bin Salman and on TV with Benjamin Netanyahu. For weeks, the Saudi crown prince privately pressed Trump to strike Iran. At the same time, Riyadh publicly promised not to let its airspace be used and posed as a fan of “diplomacy.” Netanyahu kept doing what he has done for years: openly pushing the U.S. to hit what he calls Israel’s existential enemy. Together they helped sell Trump on a regime‑decapitation air campaign against a country of more than 90 million people. They were pushing against U.S. intelligence, not following it. American agencies judged that Iran posed no imminent threat to the U.S. homeland. Military analysts said any Iranian long‑range missile program was at least a decade away, if it even began. Nuclear inspectors reported no evidence that Iran had restarted enrichment after last summer’s strikes. Trump threw that all out and chose the stories from his favorite allies instead. Then he went on camera to talk about “imminent threats,” bombs, and payback for 1979, like this was a cable‑news sequel to the hostage crisis. The Saudi role looks especially cynical. In public, MBS talked about de‑escalation and said Saudi territory wouldn’t be used for attacks. In private, he warned U.S. officials that if Washington did not strike now — with the biggest American build‑up in the region since 2003 — Iran would come out stronger. His brother, Defense Minister Khalid bin Salman, flew to Washington in January to underline the “downsides” of not attacking. After the first U.S. wave, Iran hit Saudi targets anyway. Riyadh instantly switched to outraged statements demanding “all necessary and decisive measures” against Tehran. Inside Trump’s camp, the fantasy is that this is still “restrained.” JD Vance calls himself a skeptic of foreign wars and insists there is “no chance” of a drawn‑out conflict in the Middle East. At the same time, he backs an air war that has already hit seven countries in one term. Trump promises “heavy and pinpoint” bombing in Iran “throughout the week, or as long as necessary” to deliver “PEACE THROUGHOUT THE MIDDLE EAST AND, INDEED, THE WORLD!” It is regime change by real‑estate slogan. No plan for what happens on the ground. No clarity on who runs Iran if the system actually cracks. Just faith that smart bombs plus Twitter bravado can redesign a region. Veterans of earlier disasters are spelling out the obvious. Air power alone has a bad track record when the goal is to rewrite another country’s politics. Iraq in 2003 at least came with ground troops, a long occupation, and a giant civilian bureaucracy pretending to build a new state. This time, Trump is trying to do the deluxe regime‑change package at discount scale. The goals are the same — friendly regimes in Iran and Venezuela, crushed militias from Yemen to Somalia — but the method is cheaper: listen to a Gulf prince and an Israeli prime minister, ignore your own intel, drop bombs, and promise voters it will somehow be fast, clean, and paid for by someone else’s ruins. #Iran#Trump#Saudi#MBS#Netanyahu#war#regimeChange#USintelligence 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #4763 · 01/03/2026, 10:02 PM

📰 Saudi Arabia’s Booze Ban: The Quiet Revolution Saudi Arabia is quietly lifting its decades-old ban on alcohol—no fanfare, no press release, just a discreet nod to modernization. In Riyadh, non-Muslim residents with premium status can now buy beer, wine, and spirits at a single, unmarked store. This isn’t just about booze. It’s about image, money, and the kingdom’s bid to attract wealthy expats and tourists. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has spent years transforming Saudi Arabia: women drive, concerts happen, and bars are built—even if they were empty until now. The process is low-key. At the liquor store, buyers show their residency card, prove they’re not Muslim, and stash their phones before browsing. The selection is decent, prices are high, but it’s still cheaper than the black market. Analysts say the change is just the start. Expect alcohol at luxury resorts and hotels along the Red Sea, following Dubai’s playbook. The kingdom needs foreign cash, and relaxing moral rules is part of the pitch. But it’s not a free-for-all. Alcohol will stay banned in religious cities like Mecca and Medina. The government is treading carefully, aware that most Saudis remain conservative. As one longtime expat put it: “It’s exciting. No more dangerous homemade liquor or overpriced smuggled bottles.” So while Saudi Arabia still executes dissenters and bans homosexuality, it’s learning to serve a cocktail. #SaudiArabia#alcohol#modernization#MBS#DubaiModel 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸