Sentences with phrase «larger global sense»

Not exact matches

«While carrier customers like the idea of buying infrastructure from large global suppliers, it's not obvious to us that amassing scale for the sake of it makes sense for the vendors,» analysts at Jefferies said in a note Wednesday before the deal was announced.
«Their popularity can be seen in the traditional sense as a mere brand extension,» Ong tells Entrepreneur, «but it is also a signifier of a larger cultural phenomenon: the rise of fan - based global subcultures.»
A sense of salvation by human agency begins to permeate the global whole, and the world at large becomes the true church.
In a larger country with a smaller population, Canadian evangelicals are more likely to support sharing resources and welcoming immigrants and refugees; they are less likely to feel a sense of «manifest destiny» or to see their country as a Christian nation, according to Brian Stiller, the Ontario - based global ambassador of the World Evangelical Alliance.
This idea of a consciousness which posits itself in positing its contents undoubtedly constitutes the strongest resistance to any idea of revelation, not only in the specific sense of the religions of the book, but also in the larger, more global sense that we have just connected to the poetic function of discourse,
«The mission of Pathways is to make sense of it all,» observes Jeremy Abbate, Director of Global Media for Scientific American, and the Publishing Director of the project, «We are presenting health from the viewpoint of every stakeholder — reseachers, patients, providers, regulatory bodies, small and large companies, and others — and trying to understand what the landscape will look like in five years, in twenty - five years.»
«Southern Ocean clouds play a large role in the global climate, and hopefully this will help us get a better sense of how sensitive the Earth is to greenhouse gases,» said Burrows.
(Racked) «As the world's second - largest apparel company — after Inditex, which owns Zara — H&M said it felt a sense of «shared responsibility» when it came to persistently low wages, an issue as endemic to the global garment industry as unrelenting hours and unsafe environments.»
Which makes perfect sense: You really can't find a more basic business model than a large pan-European (& increasingly global) fruit & vegetable distributor, who passes along volatile price changes to customers almost on a real - time basis.
Please forgive me for stating the obvious: there are mountains of scientific evidence, plenty of sound reasons and abundant common sense imploring the leaders of India, China, the US and the rest of the over-developed and under - developed world to consider that the seemingly endless, global expansion of large - scale industrialization and production capabilities, now overspreading the surface of Earth, could be approaching a point in history when these unbridled big - business activities could dangerously destablize frangible global ecosystems, irreversibly degrade the environment, recklessly dissipate Earth's natural resource base and, perhaps, destroy our planetary home as a fit place for human habitation by our children.
In the sense of map scales, we're talking about going a very small scale (global; say maybe 1:100,000,000) to a larger scale ratio (regional — maybe 1:10,000,000 or 1:1,000,000)... which process might better have been called upscaling.
In a larger sense, it doesn't matter because major policy positions and global conferences continue with incorrect claims about overpopulation.
«Getting serious about climate change requires wrangling about the cost of emissions goals, sharing the burdens and drawing up international funding mechanisms,» they add, so it makes sense to shift from a simple but esoteric measure of global - temperature change to a range of indicators to which larger numbers of people are likelier to relate — indicators the authors argue are thus likelier to spur policies that have a real climate - curbing impact.
Natural gas, generally, emits half the amount of CO2 per unit of electricity as oil does, so it makes sense for big petroleum companies to lean on this resource more as a way to position their respective asset mixes as lower carbon and secure an even larger piece of the global carbon budget.
While on first thought this might seem undesirable because we are looking for a global number, it might make sense to separate them due to the large difference in land / ocean ratio and the fact that atmospheric circulation patterns isolate them WRT shorter term changes.
This has never made much sense in the context of greenhouse warming theory (though its proponents have tied themselves into pretzels trying to explain it) since global warming theory (as embodied in the last IPCC report) holds that the largest temperature gains should be in the lower troposphere over the tropics, and offers no reason why the warming in the Artic should be orders of magnitude larger than in the Antarctic.
Though I've got to roll my eyes a bit at Monsieur Vie's own sense of the scale of the current economic woes — the crisis is affecting and is going to affect millions more than «a few people» — his larger point that the environmental crisis and its global implications can not be allowed to take a backseat to the economic one in global agendas is valid.
In a crude sense, to the extent that GCMs either replicate an AMO - like phenomenon, or produce large but nonperiodic fluctuations in sea - surface temps (AMO - like in size but not periodicity), then implicitly, the alternative hypothes in those studies (a world without global warming) has a lot more variation in it than this study does.
In a large sense, this is why the global climate community has latched onto the global dimming / aerosols hypothesis so quickly and so strongly.
But speaking to global HR heads at some of the largest UK and global firms reveals a sense attitudes are changing, with a number of issues in the post-crisis years demonstrating the importance of having the function embedded within the firm.
«It only made sense to expand our partnership with the largest global provider of online driver training and risk management solutions.
A smart speaker makes sense, but keep in mind that Spotify has a tremendous global brand and large user base.
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