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  2. Carousell (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carousell_(company)

    Carousell (company) Carousell is a Singaporean smartphone and web-based consumer to consumer and business to consumer marketplace buying and selling new and secondhand goods. Headquartered in Singapore, it also operates in Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.

  3. OLX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OLX

    The OLX marketplace is a platform for buying and selling services and goods such as electronics, fashion items, furniture, household goods, cars and bikes. In 2014, the platform reportedly had 11 billion page views, 200 million monthly active users, 25 million listings, and 8.5 million transactions per month.

  4. Ong Beng Seng - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ong_Beng_Seng

    Ong's business approach is to "buy and rents when properties are cheap and sell when they are not." [2] Forbes estimates the net worth of Ong and his wife Christina Ong at $1.75 billion as of September 2022, making them the 24th richest people in Singapore. [6]

  5. AyosDito.ph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AyosDito.ph

    AyosDito.ph. AyosDito.ph was an online classified-ads website for Filipinos to buy and sell online, regardless of their location in the Philippines. It was owned and operated by 701Search Pte. Ltd., which is a joint venture between media giants Singapore Press Holdings and Schibsted. [2] Launched in March 2009, [3] AyosDito offered free posting ...

  6. AliExpress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AliExpress

    AliExpress ( Chinese: 全球速卖通) is an online retail service based in China and owned by the Alibaba Group. [ 1] Launched in 2010, [ 2][ 3] it is made up of small businesses in China and other locations, such as Singapore, that offer products to international online buyers. It is the most visited e-commerce website in Russia [ 4] and was ...

  7. Chewing gum sales ban in Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chewing_gum_sales_ban_in...

    The sale of chewing gum in Singapore has been illegal since 1992. Some motivations for the ban included stopping the placement of used chewing gum in inappropriate and costly places, such as the sensors of subway doors, inside lock cylinders, and on elevator buttons. Since 2004, an exception has existed for therapeutic, dental, and nicotine ...

  8. Vehicle registration plates of Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicle_registration...

    Private car licence plate numbers began in the early 1900s when Singapore was one of the four Straits Settlements, with a single prefix S for denoting Singapore, then adding a suffix letter S 'B' to S 'Y' for cars, but skipping a few like S 'A' (reserved for motorcycles), S 'H' (reserved for taxis), S 'D' (reserved for municipal vehicles), and S 'G' for goods vehicles large and small.

  9. Inside the Coach archives: See the historic handbags that ...

    www.aol.com/finance/inside-coach-archives-see...

    Founded in 1941, the company now known as Coach started out as a family-run leather-goods business. Two decades later, the company brought in its first lead designer, Bonnie Cashin, and began the ...