Sentences with phrase «argue your point online»

Plus, how do you expect me to argue your point online if I can't track you down and physically assault you when I lose?

Not exact matches

Anyadiegwu argued that while she's grown the company tremendously on her own — to the point where she sees $ 50,000 a month in revenue — she needs a shark's help to scale up and build a larger online platform.
Point taken, but I'd argue that in any corner of the internet where these types of discussions are held quickly turn into some of the nastiest, most disingenuous arguments held in bad faith that you'll ever find online.
«I would argue that [more than] 10,000 data points really tell a better story,» says hydrogeologist Donald Siegel of Syracuse University in New York, whose team published the new study online this month in Environmental Science & Technology.
As online learning gains share and transforms our education system, for some time I have argued that foundations and philanthropists would be wise to spend their dollars in moving public policy, creating proof points, and the like to create smarter demand and not invest on the supply side in the technology products and solutions themselves.
Echoing a point that he and John Chubb argued in Liberating Learning, Moe said that technology will reduce the need for labor, that online learning will lead to teachers being more geographically dispersed, and that new tools will lead to a proliferation of new school options — all of which will cost unions members, dues, and influence.
So while his daytime hours are spent at a local liberal arts college teaching literature to entitled millennials who would rather spend more time arguing about the finer points of plagiarism than write yet another essay about Hamlet, Sam drowns his leisure hours playing Elfquest, an online role - playing game where his avatar is the coolest and most revered among his fellow gamers.
Chimerical post-script: Not completely sure where it fits in, but I think it does: Robin and José Afonso Furtado pointed me to this post by Mike Shatzkin about the future of bookselling, arguing (I'm paraphrasing) that with online retailers like Amazon obliterating physical bookstores, we need a new kind of intermediary that helps curate and consolidate books for the consumer, «powered» by Amazon.
There is, I would argue, a general consensus among both information providers and information users that the electronic storage and online retrieval of large amounts of legal information, is inherently more efficient and, as Ted Tjaden points out in his posting this week, an increasing number of previously print - only monographs, treatises, and textbooks now coexist in both print and electronic formats.
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