With version history, you can see and restore older versions of your files stored in OneDrive or SharePoint. Version history works with all file types, including Microsoft 365 files, PDFs, CAD files, photos, videos, and more. If you need to, you may be able to restore deleted OneDrive files or restore deleted SharePoint items from the recycle bin.
Recovery: The Past Is History
If you have the OneDrive sync app installed on your PC, right-click the file that you want to restore to an earlier version in File Explorer and select Version history. Then select the ellipses (...) next to the version you want and click Restore.
The U.S. has experienced 34 recessions since 1857 according to the NBER, varying in length from two months (February to April 2020) to more than five years (October 1873 to March 1879). The average recession has lasted 17 months, while the six recessions since 1980 have lasted less than 10 months on average."}},"@type": "Question","name": "Which Stocks Tend Fare Better During a Recession?","acceptedAnswer": "@type": "Answer","text": "Companies in the consumer staples, health care, and utilities sectors, which see relatively small fluctuations in demand for economic reasons, tend to fare best during recessions, and their stocks have outperformed during past downturns as a result.","@type": "Question","name": "Do Recessions Always Coincide With Bear Markets?","acceptedAnswer": "@type": "Answer","text": "A bear market is commonly defined as a sustained drop of 20% or more from a market peak. Of the 25 bear markets since 1928, 14 have overlapped with recessions."]}]}] EducationGeneralDictionaryEconomicsCorporate FinanceRoth IRAStocksMutual FundsETFs401(k)Investing/TradingInvesting EssentialsFundamental AnalysisPortfolio ManagementTrading EssentialsTechnical AnalysisRisk ManagementNewsCompany NewsMarkets NewsCryptocurrency NewsPersonal Finance NewsEconomic NewsGovernment NewsSimulatorYour MoneyPersonal FinanceWealth ManagementBudgeting/SavingBankingCredit CardsHome OwnershipRetirement PlanningTaxesInsuranceReviews & RatingsBest Online BrokersBest Savings AccountsBest Home WarrantiesBest Credit CardsBest Personal LoansBest Student LoansBest Life InsuranceBest Auto InsuranceAdvisorsYour PracticePractice ManagementFinancial Advisor CareersInvestopedia 100Wealth ManagementPortfolio ConstructionFinancial PlanningAcademyPopular CoursesInvesting for BeginnersBecome a Day TraderTrading for BeginnersTechnical AnalysisCourses by TopicAll CoursesTrading CoursesInvesting CoursesFinancial Professional CoursesSubmitTable of ContentsExpandTable of ContentsWhat's a Recession?Surveying Past U.S. RecessionsThe Roosevelt RecessionThe Union RecessionThe Post-War RecessionThe Post-Korean War RecessionThe Eisenhower RecessionThe "Rolling Adjustment" RecessionThe Nixon RecessionThe Oil Crisis RecessionThe Energy Crisis RecessionThe Iran/Energy Crisis RecessionThe Gulf War RecessionThe 9/11 RecessionThe Great RecessionCOVID-19 RecessionFAQsThe Bottom LineEconomicsMacroeconomicsA Review of Past RecessionsByThe Investopedia Team Full Bio LinkedIn Twitter Investopedia contributors come from a range of backgrounds, and over 20+ years there have been thousands of expert writers and editors who have contributed.Learn about our editorial policiesUpdated June 16, 2022Reviewed byCharles PottersFact checked byAriel Courage Fact checked byAriel CourageFull BioAriel Courage is an experienced editor, researcher, and former fact-checker. She has performed editing and fact-checking work for several leading finance publications, including The Motley Fool and Passport to Wall Street.
Companies in the consumer staples, health care, and utilities sectors, which see relatively small fluctuations in demand for economic reasons, tend to fare best during recessions, and their stocks have outperformed during past downturns as a result.
You can view and restore previous versions of files and folders in your Dropbox account. How far back you can view and restore is referred to as version history and depends on the Dropbox plan you have.
For example, if you upgrade from Dropbox Basic, which has a 30-day version history window, to Dropbox Professional, which has a 180-day version history window, you'll be able to view and restore previous versions of files and folders within the next 180 days, but you won't be able to view and restore previous versions of files and folders from 180 days ago.
In the past, you might have kept multiple drafts of your files in case you needed to refer or switch to earlier versions. Google Drive keeps all your drafts in one file. You can easily view or restore earlier versions.
If you want to avoid paying fees for your past tax returns, the IRS offers free tax return and tax account transcripts. However, transcripts are only available for the tax returns you file in the current and three prior years. The tax return transcript will report most of the information from your original tax return, but it doesn't report any changes that occur after the original filing, such as IRS adjustments. The tax account transcript, however, will reflect these changes, so ordering both types of transcripts should provide you with all the information you need.
As the Earth moved out of ice ages over the past million years, the global temperature rose a total of 4 to 7 degrees Celsius over about 5,000 years. In the past century alone, the temperature has climbed 0.7 degrees Celsius, roughly ten times faster than the average rate of ice-age-recovery warming.
Temperature histories from paleoclimate data (green line) compared to the history based on modern instruments (blue line) suggest that global temperature is warmer now than it has been in the past 1,000 years, and possibly longer. (Graph adapted from Mann et al., 2008.)
Models predict that Earth will warm between 2 and 6 degrees Celsius in the next century. When global warming has happened at various times in the past two million years, it has taken the planet about 5,000 years to warm 5 degrees. The predicted rate of warming for the next century is at least 20 times faster. This rate of change is extremely unusual.
I can put this in perspective by comparing the recovery with data from recessions and recoveries in 17 advanced economies over the past century and a half (see Jordà, Schularick, and Taylor 2011). In the figure, the solid black line shows a projection based on this data of the average path real GDP per person takes in recessions and recoveries. Ninety-five percent of the time, GDP lies within the shaded region shown in the figure. As you can see, the most recent U.S. recession was one of the worst. To a considerable extent, that was because we went through a financial crisis of historic proportions. Research has shown that, when a financial crisis hits, the accompanying downturn tends to be unusually harsh. So the sharp plunge in GDP during the first two years of the recession may not be that surprising.
Recent data show this improvement is continuing. This is easiest to see in housing, which is now in a broad-based expansion after years of depressed activity. Across the country, sales of new and existing homes have risen substantially over the past year, and prices are up 10 to 15%. Homebuilders have responded by stepping up construction.
This higher wealth has offset the effects of the increase in taxes at the beginning of the year, allowing consumer spending to grow at a healthy pace. That seems likely to continue. Two major surveys, Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers (2013) and the Conference Board Consumer Confidence Survey (2013), show consumer sentiment in recent months has been higher than at any time over the past five years and that people are more upbeat about prospects for economic growth and jobs.
In the job market, private-sector hiring has actually picked up. Over the past six months, nonfarm private payrolls have grown by just under 200,000 jobs per month compared with an average of about 160,000 in the previous six months. The unemployment rate has fallen 0.6 percentage point over the past 12 months.
Marijuana use is a hot topic, with many states having already legalized the drug for medical and/or recreational use and other states pushing for similar legalization. Marijuana has been controversial in the United States for decades. But for a significant portion of modern human history, marijuana had medicinal, spiritual, and recreational uses that date back at least 5,000 years. Archeologists have found evidence of marijuana paraphernalia as far back as the first millennium BC in India, China, Africa, and Assyria.1,2
Medicinal use of marijuana dates back at least 5,000 years, as such cannabis history is tied to many iconic time periods. Marijuana was said to have been an ingredient in a holy anointing oil referenced in the original Hebrew version of Exodus. The Ancient Egyptians reportedly used marijuana to treat glaucoma as well as general inflammation. Chinese Emperor Fu Hsi called cannabis a popular medicine in 2,900 BC, and the Chinese had identified more than 100 medicinal uses for marijuana by 100 AD.1
Cannabis has had a long and sometimes tumultuous past in the United States since the nation was formed. Originally used as a textile material and later a medicinal ingredient, this plant became highly controversial through the years. The marijuana history timeline below outlines this journey:
It doesn't matter if you see no history version of your lost file on Mac in Method 1. Here, third-party & reliable EaseUS Mac file recovery software - Data Recovery Wizard for Mac with its Unsaved Document feature can easily find your historical versions of lost files. See what you can do with this software: 2ff7e9595c
Commentaires