Sentences with phrase «as authors post»

If you are using Google Reader (which you have if you have a gmail account), you can easily subscribe to a bundle I have created that will update you on blogs as authors post them, which will save you from constantly checking the site for updates.

Not exact matches

Entrepreneurs» daydreams of this nurturing, Yoda - like mentor may be as natural as school girls mooning over Justin Bieber, but it's still entirely wrong, according to a recent post on the HBR blogs by author and training pro Jodi Glickman.
«If you speak up at some length at work, even if you are in a senior position, you will be seen not only as gabby but also as incompetent,» the authors warn women in another post for The Daily Beast.
And they use the author's name as a verb that can refer either to purging or meticulous folding: «Waiting for kettle to boil... So I Kondoed my recipe books,» Elaine Colliar, a family - finance columnist for Scotland's Sunday Mail, proclaimed in a recent Facebook post,» reported the WSJ recently.
Many business leaders confess to struggling to say no, as did Wharton professor and author Adam Grant recently in a recent LinkedIn post.
And while on - the - job napping is still considered a faux pas in many companies, Arianna Huffington, The Huffington Post cofounder and author of «The Sleep Revolution,» predicts that in the next few years nap rooms will be as universal as conference rooms.
The Washington Post blog was ultimately revised with an editor's note: «The post occasioned three rebuttals (here, here and here) as well as a response from the authPost blog was ultimately revised with an editor's note: «The post occasioned three rebuttals (here, here and here) as well as a response from the authpost occasioned three rebuttals (here, here and here) as well as a response from the authors.
As Suze Orman, best - selling author, award - winning financial advisor and former CNBC host, writes in a recent blog post, before making a purchase, ask yourself, «Is this a need or a want?»
You'll turn up some great guest post opportunity possibilities for yourself, as well as gain some insight into ways you can connect with authors of authority.
I've seen many of these kinds of emails before and the author of this email doesn't seem to be offering money but the post itself as a contribution to your site.
Authored by incoming federal trade commissioner Rohit Chopra as he awaited Senate confirmation for his new post, the paper marks the first comprehensive attempt to rethink federal anti-corruption policy in years — maybe since the Watergate era.
Shopify does have a blog, and its features are impressive — you can change author info, categorize posts, and adjust the meta description — but the design is not as intuitive as WordPress.
I want to make it clear that none of this post should be construed as a personal attack on the authors of various Safe Withdrawal Rate studies.
Canada has also not moved to align itself with the growing international consensus that the term of copyright protection is more appropriately the life of the author (known as pma, or post mortem auctoris) plus 70 years, as adopted by the US, all EU countries and a number of others.
Here's what Jean Yarbrough of Bowdoin, the distinguished author of pathbreaking books on President TJ and President TR, wrote: I read this post with great interest, as....
Today the pastor and renowned author posted some interesting reflections on the connections and tensions between worship and social justice, using a story involving the man who betrayed Jesus to unto death as an example, on Twitter.
The author of this post strikes me as a skilled, compassionate presence whom I would welcome to my bedside... not soon, I hope.
As the author of this blog post and the book UnPoverty, thanks to each of you who took time to share thoughtful insights and comments.
... as you stated in another post «By inspiring the human authors to write what they did, God made it look like He was the one responsible for the actions of Israel, the destruction of the flood, the murder of the firstborn males of Israel, and the slaughter of Canaanite women and children.
As I mentioned in my post, «2016 and the Risk of Birth,» in revisiting Madeleine L'Engle's Genesis Trilogy, I've been struck by how forthcoming the author is about her own fears around raising children during the Cold War.
I find it disappointing that the author, while doing a fine job of pointing out the shortcomings and weaknesses of post modernism, offers as an alternative the flawed and rightfully declining faith - without - evidence world of organized religion.
CNN: My Take: Counting the Bible's words doesn't yield a Republican Jesus Stephen Prothero, Boston University religion scholar and author of «The American Bible: How Our Words Unite, Divide, and Define a Nation,» responds to angry emails he received after writing a Belief Blog post in which he takes issue with evangelicals using Jesus as a political tool to benefit the Republican Party.
In yesterday's post I suggested that if we understand the inspiration of God as the «whisperings of God» then it makes sense to think that God has been whispering truth not just to the authors of Scripture, but also to people who wrote the writings of other religions.
Maybe next time — think twice before entering a post sarcastically criticizing an article's author (as in saying: «Yeah Richard here is a real wiz - kid isnt he») when you can't back up what you yourself argue and say.
Some practical points: If you're just starting out, some opportunities that make a lot of sense for platform - building include: writing guest posts for popular bloggers who share a similar audience, writing a regular column for a newspaper or online magazine, seeking out speaking gigs (paid or unpaid), participating in conferences (for networking opportunities as well as exposure to new, inspiring ideas), using social media to share your message, and requesting interviews with popular authors / speakers / leaders to feature on your blog.
In this case, it's an unusual name, one the blogger admitted had intrigued her, and to use it as her post's title without including the author's name (as in «Paula Deen's Tallahassee Taters»), strikes me as inappropriate and opportunistic.
It was a much needed win given our run of results so far but, unlike the author of this post we shouldn't be overly enthusiastic just yet until Arsenal as a team can recreate this feat consistently and more hopefully, consecutively.
I much prefer transfer stories like «Arsenal should sign Vidal, and here's why...» At least then there's an actual argument to the story and it's more likely to be creative, informative and interesting as opposed to a comical «rumour» that started in the author's head 5 minutes before it was posted.
I am just trying to make this post fun as the author wanted to do.
Sorry but the author of this post is as deluded and moronic as the manager himself.
I'm posting from Mom 2.0 Summit this morning, where I'm wearing my hats as a consultant (helping a client with their conference presence), blogger (I'll be speaking on the state of the blogging union), and author (Asha and my work was nominated for two Iris Awards!).
You clearly can't understand as aptly demonstrated by the author of the original post.
Okay, I finished the posts, and as always have one more thing to say.One thing that bugs me when I read parenting books is when the author eludes to the fact that it needs to be one way or the other.
Editor's note: This post was originally published on September 15, 2008, and examines how the author has adapted Attachment Parenting International's Eight Principles of Parenting as her children grew out of the infant / toddler years.
As I discussed in yesterday's post (New analysis from Arizona shows — yet again — that homebirth triples the neonatal death rate), the authors of the analysis, after demonstrating that homebirth increases the risk of neonatal death by a factor of three reach a bizarre conclusion:
The authors describe their blog as an «eco-ethical online community» because users can share green news and tips, and post their own pictures and videos.
Gayle Berry has written and designed all course materials and has a PGCE in Teaching and Delivering Learning to post 16 sector.Gayle has ten years experience as a teacher and is also the author of a successful book «Baby Massage - Expert know - how at your fingertips».
Comments on this website are the sole responsibility of the comment's author and by posting the author assumes full responsibility, liability, and blame for any libel or litigation that results from something written in or as a direct result of something written in a comment.
About the author This is a guest post written by the author of a FindGasCards.com a website where you can find the best gas cards, as well as a helpful auto blog!
I have worked with organisations such as Pampers, Nurofen for Children, Mother & Baby Magazine, Practical Parenting Magazine, Colief and New World Music, Huffington Post, Huggies Wipes to provide education on baby massage and I am the author of «Baby Massage - Expert know - how at your fingertips».
In the post, the author discussed the arbitrary lines drawn between «spanking» and «abuse,» as well as the rationales given for corporal punishment.
This post originally appeared as an opinion column in the Financial Times and is republished here with the permissions of the author and the FT.. The original column can be found here.
Even on big sites such as Huffington Post or Daily Kos, different authors tend to cover their own favorite topics, and if you don't know who writes about what, it's very hard to...
McNutt also notes the many new pressures facing science publishing — such as authors bypassing journals entirely and posting their work directly on the Internet, sometimes as a way to more directly engage the public and provide more immediate connections to readers and promotion of their findings.
As the pressure on the ocean floor eases, magma erupts more readily at the spreading centers, thickening the plates and creating the abyssal hills, say the authors of two new studies, one published online this week in Science (http://scim.ag/JCrowley) and another posted online in Geophysical Research Letters.
For research papers created under grants for which the authors are required by their funding agencies to make their research results publicly available (for example, from NIH, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, or Wellcome Trust), we allow posting of the accepted version of research content (Research Articles and Reports) to the funding body's archive or designated repository (such as PubMed Central) no sooner than six months after publication, provided that a link to the final version of the paper published in the Science Journal is included.
For authors who are required by their funding agencies to make their research results publicly available, AAAS allows posting of the accepted version of the paper to the funding body's archive or designated repository (such as PubMed Central) six months after publication, provided that a link to the final version published by AAAS is included.
As noted in a blog post at ChemBark, the authors of an article published in a chemistry journal seem to have done something similar, but worse: A note was left in the supporting information that seems to instruct the primary author to fabricate data.
It is work noting that the eruption of Mt. Pinitubo mentioned by the author of post 41 served as a very nice «test case» for those researchs in the fields of atmosperic chemistry and radiative transfer.
Alvania explained that, although very few (~ 2 %) JCB authors shared preprints, her journal has no policy that precludes posting preprints on a server or referencing them in published papers as a footnote.
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