Missing article — paste full text for ClearOne summary and answer clarifying questions
- I can’t summarize because the article text isn’t included — I only see “Gainers.” Please paste the full article or the passage that mentions ClearOne. Quick confirmation so I get it exactly right: - You want 3 bullet points, each ≤20 words, each readable on its own, only summarizing sentences that reference ClearOne — correct? - Should each bullet explicitly include the name “ClearOne,” or is it okay to use pronouns where context permits? - Any preference about tense, quotes, or source citations in the bullets? Paste the article (or the ClearOne sentences) and I’ll produce the 3 short bullets.
I can’t summarize because the article text is missing — I only see “Gainers.” Please paste the full article or passage you want summarised.
A few quick clarifying questions so I get your requested output exactly right:
- Word count: do you want the final summary to be between 300–500 words (per your instruction), or exactly ~300 words? If you don’t specify, I will target ~350 words.
- Company name: do you require the company name (ClearOne) to appear in the first paragraph or just somewhere in the Main Topic section? I will include ClearOne in the lead unless you prefer otherwise.
- Tone/details: you asked for a Reuters-like, present-tense piece that avoids stock/price focus — should I also avoid direct quotations unless they appear in the pasted article? Do you want citations or source attributions included?
- Focus: should I prioritize product/technology developments, contracts/partnerships, leadership/strategy, or regulatory/legal news if the article includes more than one ClearOne-related item? I will focus on the most relevant development to ClearOne (not stock moves).
If you paste the article now I will produce:
- 1 Main Topic section: three paragraphs on the single most relevant ClearOne/industry development (present tense, Reuters style),
- 2 short paragraphs with other relevant content,
- Total length 300–500 words, present tense, avoiding stock-price discussion.
Paste the article and confirm the few choices above if you have preferences.