Sentences with phrase «boggling decision»

For those offices that are thinking of switching to word processing in the cloud, deciding whether to use Microsoft Office 365 or Google Apps can be a mind - boggling decision.
Now that that's done, you've got a truly mind - boggling decision on your hands: Should you choose a series of cheap one - way flights or a pre-booked round - the - world ticket?
Several mind - boggling decisions have been taken by CEDECOM that makes every follower of the Commission wonder what is wrong with its handlers.
The developer has often made obtuse, sometimes mind - boggling decisions that are either left in place without further comment or largely ignored until players either become fed up and stop playing or voice enough criticism that Bungie rolls back the change or, at the very least, offers more detailed reasoning for it.

Not exact matches

They emerged as the industry consolidators, using high levels of gearing to pay mind boggling prices for assets (in 2007, APN was the target of a bid by a private equity consortium that was blocked by a shareholder vote at $ 6.20 per share, a decision which cost them a lot.
Bill Donohue, president of the Catholic League For Religious and Civil Rights, called the decision «mind - boggling» and «indefensible and obscene,» speculating that anti-Catholic bigotry was at play.
On a previous story regarding your not accurately reporting why the president was not able to attend NAACP convention I quoted Justice Scalia It boggles the mind, It was the Immigration decision not the Affordable Care Act Ddecision not the Affordable Care Act DecisionDecision.
This does not bode well for Jamie Foxx, and makes his decision to take the role all the more mind - boggling.
The opinions run the gamut pretty comprehensively — from those who think Graham actually made the right decision to renounce support to those who think that his «mind - boggling hypocrisy and wholly apparent lack of integrity» are what ruined the bill.
The number and extent of wine variations studied boggles the mind a bit, and without clear evidence for which tendencies are healthier or tastier, the results can be data overload rather than useful decision - making factors.
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