Sentences with phrase «growing number of other services»

A split in the Bitcoin would also mean a split in the services that nearly all cryptocurrencies rely on to run exchanges, amongst a growing number of other services.

Not exact matches

The number of competitor studios and other venues such as fitness clubs that offer lower pricing for a cycling experience and a lower level of service continues to grow in our markets.
MaRS and other organizations have established an enabling environment to support the growing number of startups and budding entrepreneurs by providing resources, access to advisory and capital services for greater chances of success.
Both a no cost website relationship service and a payment online relationship is facing growing numbers of individuals who want to account to satisfy others.
Across the country, the number of community schools continues to grow, as local educators, community leaders, and others look for equitable, efficient, and effective ways to provide the broad range of supports and services that allow young people to become truly well - prepared to enter college or a career.
Or take it from YouTube, where our growing number of videos, channel views, and total views outnumber all other high - quality, full - service book publishing and marketing firms.
Networking with other service organizations in the county is vital to coordinating assistance to the growing number of older adults in Marin.
The Avian Welfare Coalition (AWC) is seeking the participation of avian veterinarians and technicians in an initiative to help improve the services provided to the growing number of parrots and other exotic birds entering our nation's animal sheltering system.
They lack port and emergency services, and are as vulnerable to economic shocks as any other facet of global commerce: Shipping along the Northern Sea Route across Europe and Russia grew from 33 vessels in 2011 (a record number at the time) to 46 in 2012 and 71 in 2013 — before skidding down to 22 in 2014.
Today, more than half of all internet connections are made via tablets and smartphones, and a growing number of consumers are bypassing traditional search engines and finding legal services in other ways.
Online consumers are now connecting in more ways than ever before; and a growing number of them are bypassing traditional search engines and finding legal services in other ways.
A growing number of online consumers are bypassing search engines altogether and finding legal services in other ways.
Today, more than half of all internet connections are made through tablets or smartphones, and a growing number of web users are bypassing traditional search engines and looking for qualified legal services in other ways.
But consumers today are more social and more mobile with a growing number of web users bypassing search engines entirely and finding legal services in other ways.
For example, over half of all web connections are now made with a smartphone or tablet, and a growing number of internet users are bypassing traditional search engines and finding legal services in other ways.
Today, more than half of all internet connections are made through a tablet or smartphone, and a growing number of web users bypass traditional search engines altogether and seek out legal services in other ways.
Consumers are becoming more mobile and social, and a growing number of them bypass traditional web browsers and search engines and find legal services in other ways.
More than half of online users now connect using tablets or smart phones, and a growing number of consumers bypass traditional search engines and look for legal services in other ways.
More than half of all internet connections are now made with a smart phone or tablet, and a growing number of online consumers are bypassing search engines and finding legal services in other ways.
Online consumers are becoming more social and more mobile, and a growing number of them have stopped using traditional search engines and are finding legal services in other ways.
The prospective scenarios proposed by this report are based on a number of hypothetical social, economical and cultural situations, among others an ageing population, a changing socio - cultural reality due to immigration, a deepening divide between the rich and the poor, the omnipresence of IT in all sectors of society, the inability of the «welfare state» to maintain its offer of public services and goods, the feminization of the legal practice, a growing focus on quality of life, new business models, a transnational practice of law and a shift in influence from the West to the East.
Joel invited other lawyers to consider how they can support the growing number of people who can't afford traditional legal services.
Both solutions will occur because the power of the news media and of the internet, interacting, will quickly make widely known these types of information, the cumulative effect of which will force governments and the courts to act: (1) the situations of the thousands of people whose lives have been ruined because they could not obtain the help of a lawyer; (2) the statistics as to the increasing percentages of litigants who are unrepresented and clogging the courts, causing judges to provide more public warnings; (3) the large fees that some lawyers charge; (4) increasing numbers of people being denied Legal Aid and court - appointed lawyers; (5) the many years that law societies have been unsuccessful in coping with this problem which continues to grow worse; (6) people prosecuted for «the unauthorized practice of law» because they tried to help others desperately in need of a lawyer whom they couldn't afford to hire; (7) that there is no truly effective advertising creating competition among law firms that could cause them to lower their fees; (8) that law societies are too comfortably protected by their monopoly over the provision of legal services, which is why they might block the expansion of the paralegal profession, and haven't effectively innovated with electronic technology and new infrastructure so as to be able to solve this problem; (9) that when members of the public access the law society website they don't see any reference to the problem that can assure them that something effective is being done and, (10) in order for the rule of law, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and the whole of Canada's constitution be able to operate effectively and command sufficient respect, the majority of the population must be able to obtain a lawyer at reasonable cost.
The acquisition of Quicklaw and its merger with Lexis Nexis, combined with the publication of Halsburys Laws of Canada and Juris Classeur Quebec, have given the company a national foot print, making it truly competitive with other commercial legal publishers in the Canadian market, and ensuring clear superiority over the growing number of free services.
In recent years, the USPTO has come under increasing scrutiny over the quality of its patent examinations.1 The growing push for reform of the patent system is fueled by the rapid rise of technology, financial services, telecommunications, and other innovations driving the information economy, all straining the USPTO's ability to evaluate and issue quality patents.2 Problems with patent quality occur when the Patent Office grants patents on claims that are broader than what is merited by the invention and the prior art. 3 In fact, a number of these problematic patents have been issued and publicized to much fanfare, including the infamous Smuckers» peanut butter and jelly patent where the company asserted a patent on their method of making the UncrustiblesTM crust-less peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, among others.4 These «bad» or improvidently granted patents impact the USPTO's ability to promote overall patent quality which, I will show, has serious implications for the public domain.
The home delivery of the Growing Child programme ensures that this important family support service is accessible to families living in rural areas who have limited access to centre - based services and to socially isolated or hard - to - reach families who, for a number of reasons, may not have access to or avail of other existing services — a feature that appeals to many service commissioners and funders.
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