It may be easy to overlaud this film by those craving
a bit more intelligence from their sci - fi stories, just as the more seasoned will dismiss its relative lack of deep, novelistic sophistication.
Funty: I credit Corbyn supporters with a little
bit more intelligence than that.
He brought
a bit more intelligence and control to the midfield.
Not exact matches
This would at least make the «
intelligence test» argument a
bit more explicit.
«He's got
more to come, and he can add a
bit more in terms of physicality,
intelligence and decision making, but he's got real class.
Then again, judging from your review, the movie might be a
bit more pro-Brexit than I reckoned if for no other reason that it favors the idiocy of one's peers over the malign
intelligence of dang foreigners.
Often, all - CGI cities can get exhausting to look at — as T'Challa and his ex-girlfriend (and Wakandan
intelligence agent) Nakia (a luminous Lupita Nyong» o) walk around Wakanda, packed with flying cars and massive buildings next to food stalls and street vendors, one finds oneself wishing we learned just a little
bit more about the day - to - day life there.
While we know who will be playing the primary Biggus Baddus in The Avengers: Age Of Ultron — James Spader as rogue artificial
intelligence Ultron — Joss Whedon clearly wants to give Earth's Mightiest Heroes a
bit more of a challenge.
If Loveless had kept up with our writing (not that I blame him for not) or read Disrupting Class with a
bit more of a nuanced eye, he would have seen that we didn't pin our argument on multiple
intelligences or learning styles per se — we were quite up front that we are not experts in the learning sciences by any means.
To be honest 4 GB was probably sufficient with a
bit of
intelligence from developers, just look what has been done this generation with a fraction of that amount, lazy developers will always want
more memory to make their lives easier though.
CPU
intelligence could do with another minor push, as they had from FIFA 14 to FIFA 15, but once again they need a little
bit more.
Sharon D. Nelson: Well, interesting, you kind of answered my next question, so I think I'm going to reshape it a little
bit because I do think a lot of lawyers are worried about Artificial
Intelligence replacing their jobs, and from my own perspective, I think a certain amount of that fear is justified, but I do understand what you're saying and I've watched with considerable admiration as you've kind of turned your ship a little
bit into a different harbor because originally it was called ROSS: The Super-Intelligent Attorney, and now, you have
more shaped ROSS from the point of view of the lawyer as somebody that allows the lawyer to be
more efficient, serve the client better, and to focus on something other than what you might call «the goat work» of the legal world, which we really don't want to do, and so how did you come to the realization that that was something that needed to be done?