
Randell Cobb
39 posts

Randell Cobb
@JuliusCaesarDC
I Love Hispanics! I Hate Bad People! Brian Harman #1 Supporter!
















3 likes for the PLAYERS card 📝 2026 PGA: +3.5U ⛳️

Final practice day is in the books 👀 1. Brian Harman (205 balls hit) 2. Alex Noren (186 balls hit) 3. Jake Knapp (156 balls hit) 4. Gary Woodland (136 balls hit) 5. Wyndham Clark (115 balls hit) Brian Harman has hit 456 balls on the range over the first three days!

The Tuesday tally is in. 1. Alex Noren (164 balls hit) 2. Eric Cole (152 balls hit) 3. Ryan Fox (140 balls hit) 4. Nicolai Højgaard (135 balls hit) 5. Ben Griffin (134 balls hit) See all of today's range sessions on TOURCAST here: range.pgatour.com/R2026011?pId=2…


The fastest way to expose whether a CEO actually uses their own product: make them do the most basic task on camera. Outlook has over 400 million active users. Microsoft’s productivity segment generated $77.8 billion last year. And the official Microsoft support page for “Outlook search not working” tells users to open the Windows Registry Editor and manually create DWORD values. That’s the fix. For a product used by almost every Fortune 500 company on Earth. Edit your registry. The reason Outlook search has been broken for years is the same reason it will stay broken: Microsoft sells to IT procurement, not to the person trying to find last Tuesday’s email. The buyer and the user are completely different people. The CIO signs a 3-year enterprise agreement based on security compliance, Azure integration, and per-seat bundling. Nobody in that purchasing decision opens Outlook and types “Q3 budget” into the search bar to see what happens. This is why Gmail search works and Outlook search doesn’t. Google built for the end user first and sold enterprise later. Microsoft built for the enterprise buyer first and shipped whatever search users would tolerate. 345 million paid seats. The switching cost is so high that Microsoft could ship Outlook with no search at all and most companies would renew anyway. Every CEO of an enterprise software company knows this. The product doesn’t need to be good. It needs to be locked in.







