Not exact matches
Rather than pay up, Uber
got into a lengthy
debate with the state in which Anthony Levandowski, vice president at Uber's Advanced Technologies Group (and founder of the self - driving startup Otto that Uber acquired) argued Uber wasn't
actually testing «autonomous vehicles» because all its vehicles had human drivers aboard and would for the foreseeable future.
(At one point the Mounties
get into an extended discussion /
debate about the career of Danny DeVito that has nothing to do with the story at hand, is
actually quite funny and works as a tribute to the versatility and longevity of Mr. Danny DeVito.)
As Senator Bayh of Indiana aptly told the Los Angeles Times in the midst of the
debate, «Everyone is for accountability until it
actually gets put
into place and applies to them.»
This has
actually been a tough read and hard to
get into and understand — I'm at the 47 % mark, and I am seriously
debating stopping and deleting it from my Kindle: that's a pretty drastic action on my part, as I rarely just stop reading halfway through many things in the sometimes fragile hope it will
get better.
But Mr. Revkin, I
actually think this question is off — it is impossible to really answer it without
getting into the
debate, which comes up a lot on DotEarth as elsewhere, about what right we have to dictate to developing countries that they pursue more expensive growth strategies than we ourselves did.
After
debating on the subject matter for today's post, I decided that since Small Law attorneys are quite comfortable, often by necessity, with diving right
into the deep end of things, let's
get down to brass tacks: Are there
actually jobs at small law firms and, if so, what should you consider before making the switch?