Sentences with phrase «just had another reader»

I just had another reader write in that she just bought this machine and it didn't work well for GF breads at all.

Not exact matches

Trouble is, those readers will be bidding against people who are buying that stuff not just because they're smart, but because they have to.
During a Reddit AMA last year, the billionaire Microsoft cofounder told readers that he had just spent his weekend watching his daughter ride horses and enjoying some old - fashioned fun.
This book might not sound like the most exciting subject for the non-expert but Parrish assures readers that «it's just the best book of its kind I have ever read, and I just hugely enjoyed it.
You could have the most fascinating article in the history of the Internet, but if you don't have an eye - catching headline, the reader will just keep scrolling — or click away.
Here in the real world, readers care not just about what you say but what it looks like on the screen too (as anyone who has every instantly clicked away from a blog post in an insane font or with wonky formatting can attest).
And don't get me wrong, I've been an avid reader all my life — just not business or self - help books.
In fact, several readers have e-mailed me recently to argue that just because their little eBay hobby generates a little cash, that doesn't make it a real business.
There are a few topics that online readers have seen time and time again - and at this point, they're just becoming noise.
You have to monitor not just articles that are written, but also the readers» reactions.
She would really just sit me down and would go through scripts, and taught me the art of selling, and selling to a reader.
Readers of these pages would obviously know that AngelList is the 800 - pound gorilla and the most reputable but the truth is that many new crowd - funding platforms are appearing globally and funding through such platforms has skyrocketed in just the past two years from $ 400 million to a whopping $ 2.6 billion.
I should probably note at this point that I have been a staunch (and somewhat lonely) supporter of comments and the value of reader engagement since the days when I was the «communities editor,» or social media editor, at a major national daily newspaper in Canada in 2008, when anti-comment opinions and emotions in the newsroom were just as heated as they are today.
«We could have come out with just a basic card reader a long time ago but we wanted to do something a lot more compelling,» said Darrell MacMullin, managing director of PayPal Canada.
A user might know the brand name from their favorite blog, they might be a loyal reader, they might have seen one of your offers on social media, or they might have just found your site through a basic search.
It's also just increasingly hard to attract audiences and some think that even as good a news reader as Flipboard has a limited appeal.
«All the data shows that people are reading newspapers more than ever... it's just that newspaper companies are having a hard time monetizing those readers and monetizing their content.»
Our readers are interested in health care: Do you have a first - person account from somebody who has just benefited from health care abroad?
After almost 30 years of losing money, it was the cost of publishing a newspaper for so few daily readersjust 40,718 once free or discounted copies are stripped out — that had simply become unsustainable in an age where so much information is free online.
Common Internet logic would say that articles of those lengths just don't go viral, and that an editorial website that only publishes occasionally certainly has no chance of retaining readers.
If you have the capability, I would simply suggest reviewing your analytics data for referral information and just keep tabs that way (a previous post on Evaluating Link Results has a great comment from one of the readers regarding this — check out his idea for certain).
Don't just take our word for it... For inspiration, see our Expat Profile section to learn more about readers who have successfully made their own move overseas.
I just thought I would update this post to tell readers that I already received 2 spam comments, and I haven't even marketed this site yet!
Because some groups have thousands of members or more — and are therefore filled with potential readers and customers — they are ripe targets for spammers, as well as for well - meaning content creators who just want to spread their messages as far and wide as they can, without due concern for where it gets placed.
For a long time, though, I have wished Stratechery did a better job of providing value not just through daily emails and posts, but to the new user stumbling across the site for the first time, or the long - time reader hoping to find that one post they remember reading.
2) I've tried throughout the years to listen to podcasts, but I'm a reader and I keep opening tabs while the podcast is on and reading something else, so I can't pay attention to when people are just talking at me.
In the example below I've placed the ellipsis just at the point where the reader is curious to know what comes next:
Now, that may sound obvious to you, but I can't tell you how many sales pieces I've seen that just describe a product and then don't really ask the reader to do anything.
No affiliation — just really surprised his work hasn't shown up in several of these articles because I think both the iDoneThis team and your readers would find his work fascinating and relevant.
Dear reader, if you are overcome with fear of missing out on the next stock market move; if you feel like you have to own stocks no matter the cost; if you tell yourself, «Stocks are expensive, but I am a long - term investor»; then consider this article a public service announcement written just for you.
Readers might ask whether the author of 15 books including The Ascent of Money has found a new paradigm of historical inquiry or just another way of packaging research for the market.
Just for once why doesn't The Baltimore Sun's editorial board admit its political intolerance of any conservative views to its readers instead of pretending not to understand anyone else's lack of tolerance («Political civility: Where has all the tolerance gone?»
Just wanted to remind everyone that Market Folly readers have an exclusive extended free 30 day trial over at Alphaclone if you're interested.
I'll continue experimenting to try to make this blog more valuable to readers and I've got a project or two in the works as well as some post series I'm planning to do just that.
Extra payments on mortgage principal Reader comment: Michelle, just wanted to share with you that your mantra of «all debt is bondage» has finally gotten through to my husband.
You're right I suppose, the bible doesn't say anything about how it should or shouldn't be taken seriously, I guess only non-fiction both has to show their bonafides in order to prove the validity of the material its presenting and not asking the reader to just go with it, or «have faith it's right»....
Fortunately there are not many Muslim readers as your frivolous tirade would just re-enforce their faith in this false religion.
The writer is just projecting his own desire onto readers and his conclusions have no basis in reality.
As a practicing Mormon, I would just like to clarify something for the non-Mormon reader: there is no such thing as a «fundamentalist» Mormon, or any other shade of mormonism.
• If you found the After Liberalism» series helpful» a series, we just might note, not likely to be found in any other journal» we would be grateful for your help in getting such things into the hands of new readers.
That «functioning» is some kind of «agency» is, of course, just what any reader of Whitehead would suppose, and Leclerc quotes nothing from Whitehead against this reading.
Just for fun... a reader may have wondered about those three (3) categories above, and flinched at one or the other.
And in a way meditation on biblical material is just that: after all the other «senses» have been exhausted, there is the imaginative approach that will make it possible for the reader to grasp the big meaning of what he is reading.
It's been such a joy to hear from readers who have done just that — contributing to our Women of Valor series, making «valor» their word of the year, honoring their wives and sisters and friends as women of valor, even getting «eshet chayil» tattoos!
Readers exchange juvenile insults, condescending lectures and veer off into tangents that have nothing to do with the article they just read.
The presentation is excellent: it is a short book, just over 150 pages; it eschews unecessarily intimidating jargon — the non-specialist reader might have to look up the odd term but that could be easily done on Wikipedia; and both Eriugena's thought and Gavin's arguments are developed in an easy to follow, logical sequence.
The readers he has in mind include: perhaps a student starting her second year of study, or an academic who has just joined a theological school faculty and has never herself been previously involved in theological education, or a person newly appointed to the board of trustees of a theological school.
I was reminded of just how different our experiences can be after I came home from a day with the family to find in my Google Reader a lovely, celebratory post from Sarah Bessey, «In which God has restored me to church,» as well as an honest reminder from Kathy Escobar, «When Easter is Hard.»
Justin reminds readers that just as straight people can have very different lifestyles (Kim Kardashian, for example, has a different lifestyle than, say, Hillary Clinton or Lynne Hybels), so can gay people.
Meanwhile, in Lake Superior State University's annual «List of Words to Be Banished from the Queen's English for Misuse, Overuse, and General Uselessness» — tabulated from readers» submissions — green has just come in first.
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