Upshot in a sentence as a noun

There were internal discussions about Erlang here but the upshot was.

" The upshot was that these weasels target vulnerable borrowers with 100%+ APR loans, who are ultimately harmed.

The upshot: there's a lot more information in the moment that's relevant to purchase logic than in a person's profile or market demographics.

It's been pointed out several times that upshot was developed before the announcement of the competition and multiple developers have analytics to prove their video/app wasn't viewed once, let alone twice.

How about - this is essientially takeway but you have to heat the curry in your microwave and then add the fresh coriander yourself - the upshot is that it will last a week in your fridge should you not eat it all tonight.

In practice certain folk had "ins" with the space and planning staff and so certain desks were never "available".The practical upshot was that you had to wander around the vast office for 20 minutes trying to find the desk you booked from home that morning.

The upshot:> In a statement, the hospital said that emergency physicians and nurses would be immediately notified of certain lab results suggestive of serious infection, such as elevated band counts.

I've heard a couple of people suggesting that this interpretation is based on the idea of border search, but that's neither here nor there: the upshot is that, unlike for example the US property of non-US-resident non-US-citizens, which is protected by the Takings Clause, the US cloud data of non-resident aliens seems to have no Constitutional protection.

Upshot definitions

noun

a phenomenon that follows and is caused by some previous phenomenon; "the magnetic effect was greater when the rod was lengthwise"; "his decision had depressing consequences for business"; "he acted very wise after the event"

See also: consequence effect outcome result event issue