Sentences with phrase «different than the standard version»

The Panamera Sport Turismo doesn't drive substantially different than the standard version, but it sure looks better.

Not exact matches

Running display ads (static banners or more complex Flash / video / interactive pieces) is much more difficult than it should be, in part because different publications can have vastly different standards (I can remember one time doing three different versions each of four online ads, one set for the NY Times site, one set for Washington Post properties and one at standard 468 × 60 banner size for National Journal) and in part because ads can't be ordered from a single central broker (a situation that AOL's Advertising.com for one is trying to change).
He developed a theory nearly identical to standard QCD, with the major difference being that in his version quarks come in many different colors rather than the usual three.
Boasting artwork different from and less standard than the two - disc combo, this 3 - disc version is packaged in a standard Blu - ray case with a swinging tray and topped by an embossed holographic slipcover.
But back to the E-Class, the latest model is bigger than its predecessor and rides on a 2.75 - inch wider track that is noticeably different when its combined with the AMG tuned version that comes with larger 19 - inch wheels and a standard Agility Control suspension.
The Boxster GTS and Cayman GTS boast more power, additional standard equipment, and a different style than the Boxster S and Cayman S on which they are based.Porsche already offers GTS versions of the Cayenne SUV and the Panamera sedan.
Unlike the original, this version offers three different cars to drive rather than the standard - issue black Porsche, and there are additional little touches like ramps that flip your vehicle up on two wheels.
This is not «standard practice» in Climate Science (which apparently operates under a different version of the Scientific Method than other branches of science).
US defamation law allows private persons to prove and recover actual damages using a negligence standard (rather than the more stringent actual malice standard) 172 on the basis that private persons are more vulnerable to injury than public figures and their reputations are more deserving of protection.173 That recognition is consistent with the argument advanced herein, namely that there is something qualitatively different about individuals who possess reputation as celebrity: their discursive power to yoke the media to their reputation - constructing ends.174 Discursive power is the ability not just to erect a website putting his or her version of the story online (which virtually anyone can now do), but also the ability to cause mass media outlets to devote attention to his or her side of the story.
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