Sentences with phrase «biggest brain ever»

It's also spatially aware, so it can adapt the sound to the space it's in, and it's powered by an A8 chip, which is apparently the «biggest brain ever in a speaker.»
The speaker is under 7 inches tall and it houses 7 - array beam - forming tweeter pack, an upward - facing 4 - inch woofer, and an Apple A8 chip, which Apple says is the biggest brain ever in a speaker.
It's a lot of processing power for a speaker, and Apple says it's perhaps the «biggest brain ever» built into a speaker.

Not exact matches

for a big head he has, he has a peanut for a brain, so don't even dare to think that he could ever turn into a edgar davids in the future
In the midfield, (including RWB & LWB) we have a whole bunch of tweeners... none offer the full package, none make sense in our manager's current favourite formation, except for Sead on the left and Ox on the right, and all of them have never shown any consistency for more than a heartbeat... Sead, who I'm including in this category because of our present formation, looks like a positive addition, minus his occasional brain farts, but I would rather see what he could do in a back 4 before making my mind up... Ox, who has never played better, which isn't saying much considering his largely underwhelming play in previous seasons, seems to have found a home in this new formation; unfortunately, can we really expect this oft - injured player to handle the taxing duties that come with said position over the long haul, not to mention, it looks like he has no intention of staying... Ramsey has relied on the empathy that stems from his gruesome injury years ago and the excitement that was generated a few years back when he finally seemed to put in altogether, but on the whole he has been a big disappointment (neither he nor the Ox have scored enough to warrant a regular spot)... Wiltshire should be put on a weekly contract then played until he suffers his first injury, if and when that occurs he should be shipped - out and no one should very be allowed to say his name on club grounds ever again... Elnehy & Coq are average players who couldn't make any of the top 7 teams currently in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting... in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger's)
Considering I've worked soooo dang hard through attachment parenting to establish and maintain what little bit of connection I could with these precious little ones whose brain's weren't naturally wired to establish and maintain connection back... Not being «mainstream autism» is the BIGGEST compliment you could ever give me.
«This was a big surprise that SHANK3 is expressed in the peripheral nervous system, but before this study, no one had ever looked for it outside of the brain,» Ji said.
Mammals» brains grew ever bigger relative to their bodies as they struggled to survive in a world dominated by dinosaurs.
Have you ever honestly asked yourself if you (yes, you) have a) the courage of your intellectual convictions, b) a big enough brain, and c) your own personal brand of insanity to goad you through the tough times of a career in science and engineering?
When the now - famous neurological patient Henry Molaison had his brain's hippocampus surgically sectioned to treat seizures in 1953, science's understanding of memory inadvertently received perhaps its biggest boost ever.
Also speaking at the event are Dr. Ken Lacovara (Insights from the biggest dinosaur skeleton ever found), Dr. Roy Hamilton (Enhancing human mental performance with noninvasive brain stimulation), Dr. George Brainard (Better lighting for better sleep in space), Denise Wong (Tiny bio-robots for microscale medicine and engineering), Dr. Melinda Keefe (The chemistry of art conservation), and Dr. Michel Barsoum (Molding conductive «clay» into the next generation of batteries)
On the opening day of the biggest ever Huntington's disease therapeutics conference, we heard a lot about studying the complexities of the brain, and the role of the huntingtin protein, still mysterious twenty years after its discovery - but not very much about drugs.
In the past, some of my favorites have been a warm bowl of black bean quinoa chili, or a big pile of sweet potato nachos, but ever since I created that vegan lemon cream sauce, I've had pasta on the brain.
They're never ever fall into that adrenal failure criteria, but they'll have dysfunctional adrenal fatigue primarily driven by HPA — brain, poor brain adrenal communication by chronic stress and it's our job as the functional medicine doctor to figure out where that stress is coming from, nutritionally, diet-wise, obviously all the emotional and lifestyle stressors, and then even bigger, the internal infection, toxicity stressors.
A Bigger Splash is the sort of movie which normally would come and go without me ever knowing it even existed (aka highly acclaimed, with a plot requiring more than several brain cells to comprehend).
But my conscious brain knew that if I ever got that big prize — the big book contract or the major bestseller, I'd have to face the fact that my Midnight in Paris fantasy was never going to happen.
Read on in Generation Rx for: — exclusive interviews with the strategists, scientists, and current and former heads of GlaxoSmithKline, Eli Lilly, Merck, Roche, and more — a first - ever, inside look at the rollicking business story behind pharma's rise to power — the dramatic effects our drug culture is having on our major organs, from the liver to the heart to the brain — why old bodies and young bodies are the biggest, and riskiest, arenas for our great American prescription pill party — how the largely uncharted terrain of polypharmacy (various drugs taken together) has unleashed unanticipated, often deadly, consequences on unwitting patients Generation Rx will make every American who has ever taken a prescription drug look anew at what's in our medicine cabinets, and why.
I actually hadn't thought of this, but I was fairly confident that in the aftermath of the economic crisis the brain trust at TD and the other four big banks — along with an ever - growing number of smaller players — would put quite a bit of research into a fund before releasing it.
The highly - rated Strategy - RPG features bigger battles, more characters, harder bosses, a deep and compelling story, and brain - wasting strategy that come together in a way that made what many call one of the best Strategy RPG games ever made.
Such is the case, too, with the movement to stop the commercial slaughter of the biggest animals, with the biggest brains, who have ever lived on the planet: the many species of whales that swim the world's oceans.
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