In a follow up tweet, Ono said he «had [to] take some time,» and «think over very carefully
about next things.»
This lets us give immediate feedback and make decisions
about the next things to do without having to deliver constant testing.
Adam Afriyie, a Conservative, asks if he agrees that it would be good for the coalition to think
about the next things it wants to achieve.
Our generation is apt to always thinking
about the next thing, and in turn, we become distracted easily.
«As scientists, we always have to think
about the next thing,» he says, «but when you're a student, it's especially important.
Be mindful when your thoughts deviate from the task at hand — are you already worrying
about the next thing on your to - do list?
I just saw him and immediately he started talking
about the next thing he's doing.
And we're talking to developers
about the next thing they want to be doing on Xbox.»
The original list was obtained from this site, but I'm going to keep adding to it, as every day, I get another Google alert
about the next thing that's going to be catastrophically affected.
Remember to listen to their answers instead of thinking
about the next thing you want to say.
You see the job hunt is all
about the next thing and once you get the next thing, there's layoffs, closures, and other things to keep you looking for the next thing again.
Not exact matches
Mauro Porcini, the chief design officer of PepsiCo, argues that true innovation isn't
about creating the «
next big
thing» to capture their fleeting attention.
Next, take a look at the layout of the office and think
about how
things can be rearranged to make access to tools and supplies more efficient and effective for employees.
«My hunch is the
next phase of media,» he says, «will come out of authentic, chill conversation
about things that matter to people.»
Some of them got jobs, and a lot of them went successfully into treatment because if you're not spending all your time thinking
about how you're going to pay for your
next fix, you do have time to think
about other
things.
«When we look at the world, there's plenty of
things to worry
about, so we would anticipate there could be episodes of higher volatility in the second half or even
next year,» cautions Bruce Cooper, chief investment officer at TD Asset Management.
Here are a few
things I learned at the J.P. Morgan Health Conference this week: (1) Vice-presidential motorcades tie up as much traffic as presidential ones; (2) San Francisco hotels have no compunction
about charging pharma - sphere prices, especially when the city is overrun by pharma executives; (3) no one will ever know if you brought more than one blue blazer to a four - day meeting; and (4) in my
next life I want to come back as Bryan Roberts.
«The human - computer speech interface is the
next big
thing,» says Nigel Fenwick, a digital business and technology analyst with Forrester, who says Alexa and similar systems were integrated with just
about everything on the floor: refrigerators, light fixtures, house - keeping robots, security cameras, door locks, cars, speakers and headphones, shower heads, air conditioners, and the list goes on and on.
One
thing I have learned for sure
about investing in startups is that entrepreneurs love to exaggerate how much they will sell
next year.
It also gives me one less
thing to worry
about the
next day.
Then the question comes if you've managed to do that, you as a society, then the
next question is
about things like purpose and those kind of higher level questions, which I think are very interesting
things to think
about.
Once I learned all
about the business side of
things, the pair (who, by the way, have inside jokes and act like old friends), told me they were going to Google the
next day to do a live Hangout video chat with the tech blog Mashable.
If you are playing big in life, there is always the
next big
thing, so balance isn't necessarily
about slowing down but being in touch with what recharges you and doing that when you first feel the need to avoid overwhelm and burnout.
If you end up among the many who decide to begin a job search in 2018 in pursuit of your
next big
thing, here are two important but simple
things you should make sure you do that will not only significantly increase your chances of finding a great new job but will also help you land one that you can feel good
about long after the «new company halo effect» has worn off.
I love to hear
about the
next big
thing, but I'm far more interested in what you're doing with the old big
thing.
A head of one of the largest U.S. private equity companies said a geopolitical surprise is the only
thing for markets to worry
about in the
next two years.
I once had to present in front of a bunch of investors who had just heard from a Nobel Laureate who was trying to cure cancer, and I was up
next talking
about funny
things on the internet.
I feel that a lot of the time I'm either in feast or famine mode: either I have more work than I know what to do with or
things are too quiet and I worry
about attracting the
next project.
The
next thing that makes people quit on their path to building their business is not being passionate
about their business idea.
He won't go into any kind of detail
about what's to come, except to say: «
Next year, completing the core
things that people need in a bed is definitely our first priority.»
All of this is being done while trying to simultaneously educate clients on both sides of its business
about why anyone should get excited
about yet another «paradigm shift» in an online space where someone's almost always hawking the
next big
thing.
«While all docs complain
about their EHRs, as central repository for clinical information I think they'll continue to exist for a longtime,» said Roberts, who was speaking at Fortune's Brainstorm Health conference in Laguna Niguel, Calif. on Monday
about «the
next big
thing» in health care.
One of the great
things about being a small company is that you are able to roll with the punches and move fast to get the
next thing out there.
Save up three or four
things to talk to someone
about the
next time you see them and ask your team to do the same for anyone they talk to or email.
They weren't always right
about the
Next Big
Thing — but they knew it when they saw it.
And it's not just
about creating the
next new
thing; it's
about creating something that customers want.
Mattrick says the best is yet to come, but he's conspicuously silent
about the
thing that everyone at E3 wants to know
about: the
next - generation Xbox.
Wael [Mohamed], the CEO, is there, but we're always talking to him
about when he's finished there, what's the
next thing he's going to do.
«We have invested tens of millions of pounds and we are just
about to embark on another # 200 million ($ 264.8 million) capital investment program,» he added, highlighting that it's important to offer «the
next thing» for the customer.
A major investment by Stanford University in StartX places it ahead of other university accelerator programs — but the free - flowing funds also renew questions
about a school's role in incubating the
next big
thing.
When we talk
about all the amazing
things we're going to do
next, it's possible to spend all our time and energy just talking
about it and never actually doing anything towards that goal.
The free - flowing capital also renews old questions
about the school's role in luring bright students to drop out of school for the
next big
thing.
But what if the
next big
thing isn't so much a technology as it is a way of thinking
about business — an angle of vision that promises to create new kinds of markets entirely?
Be able to think
about more than two
things at once: the current discussion, your overall plan, the time, where you want to go
next.
You're onto the
next thing immediately, you're getting feedback from the people you write for all the time, and that makes you better and it makes you understand what they want to read
about or listen to or watch.
Perhaps that is the most remarkable
thing about Logan Paul — not his money, not his internet content, not even his dreams of being what his dad calls «the
next white Will Smith.»
The interesting
thing about getting to the
next level is that more isn't more, less is more.
«I'll ask [potential hires]
about something that hasn't gone so well in their life and then ask them what they've learned from it because the
next thing I look for in people is curiosity,» he says, «I'm interested in people who take those negative experiences in their lives and are really curious
about what happened and can talk intelligently
about what they learned and what they might do differently.»
We expect even our entry level team members to train us as well, to let us know
about what's the
next big
thing out there, what are people talking
about, how are they communicating, and how are they doing it effectively.
A Forbes piece recently highlighted the
next five years of user experience trends, and made key points
about how users are being changed by the internet of
things, voice and bots.