Sentences with phrase «much bigger puzzle»

The Pixel device is itself just one piece of a much bigger puzzle.
Instead of dismissing the impact of Fox News, conservative media, or Climategate, the report suggests that understanding the impact of these outlets is only one part of the much bigger puzzle of what has fueled a downturn in public belief and concern in climate change since 2007.
But, it is not the prime solution and only a small piece of a much bigger puzzle.
The bottom line, in my opinion, is that while coils in mattresses may highlight the importance of understanding and reducing EMFs in general, they are a very small piece of a much bigger puzzle.
But Krugman has a much bigger puzzle to explain away: if free markets in banking are the problem, why did Canada, which, during this period, had a far less regulated banking system than the US, not experience the panics we did, and why did no Canadian banks fail during the Great Depression while around 9000 US banks did?
You should always consider a stock's P / E ratio before investing, but remember the number is just one piece of a much bigger puzzle.

Not exact matches

That previously unseen structure could help solve some of the sun's biggest puzzles, including how the solar wind is born and why the corona is so much hotter than the solar surface.
This puzzled them until they uncovered a much bigger pueblo, consisting of 500 rooms and enclosing a central plaza, just a few hundred feet away.
Normal people solve this puzzle in a strikingly consistent way, with their response time depending on how much the angle of perspective differs between the two objects: The bigger the difference, the longer it takes people to decide whether the objects are the same.
And then I became a clinical nutritionist to continue my deep commitment to helping women solve the bigger health puzzles that keep them from thriving and getting back to a much more «normal» life.
So one big piece of the puzzle was that my iron was too low for too long... I had been midly anemic in sep 2016... and went iron pills, but my ferritin as an endurance athlete was not high enough (never got above 42 and ideally would have been at least 50)... so they put me back on iron pills and b pills... and a multivitamin... i am mostly vegetarian female endurance athlete... so this nutrition issue definitely contributed to my overtraining... I am feeling hugely much better after three months of resting... walking is getting easier at longer distances... I may start doing steady state stuff for 15mn at a time... nutritionally my body was in the hole... and it may take longer still to recover... but at least now I feel normal most of the time... and all tests have been normal...
Its biggest downfall is that you're essentially shoehorned into solving the puzzles in a way they were specifically designed, not allowing much freedom or the ability for your own creative solutions.
How much equity you have in your home is another big piece of the puzzle, as it affects how much money you'll be able to borrow.
If you can accept it as a much smaller scale puzzle game then Big Pharma is actually really good, and while you might find yourself tiring of it quite quickly the hours you do spend spinning machines around and planning out new production lines are satisfying, especially when you first begin putting together the vast collection of equipment and belts required to create the most powerful drugs, such as a cancer vaccine.
The puzzles, on the whole, are pretty lame, far too easy and uninspired, coupled with a combination of the previous two complaints they can lead to cheap deaths which seem to serve only to address the biggest problem with «Dante's», the fact that it's just far too short, a play through on the normal difficulty setting can be done without much trouble in around 6 hours and with no achievements for completing the game on harder difficulties, there's little incentive for doing it again.
Much like its predecessor, the game focuses on an abstract story and physics - based platforming puzzles... though it's not nearly as groundbreaking as Playdead's first big success.
Tennis in the face is one of the addictive little puzzle games you play in between the bigger titles, you can play for a few minutes or sit for a full night completing all of the challenges and obtaining all of the crowns, it's simple to play style and comical characters are enjoyable to beat down with a tennis ball, if you enjoy physics based puzzle games I'd advise you check it out and for # 3.99 it's pretty much pocket change!
In the beginning the puzzles are basic, nicely short and quick to solve but soon develop into much more complex and across a bigger are, to the point of not looking or feeling like a puzzle room.
Exploring the forest and its spooky atmosphere feels like it'll be a big part of Lake Ridden but it's much more compact than walking simulators, only giving you a few steps to take in the surroundings before putting another item to examine or puzzle to solve in your path.
So what is coming to this week, well after last weeks solid releases there is not all that much, this week we get the adventures of Twin Robots which I believe is some sort of puzzle game, and we get a cheap 3DS release with Gunslugs, and there is more Fire Emblem Fates downloadable content with this latest release being the biggest release yet according to various people.
The biggest change was the addition of a couple puzzles that were probably the most challenging in the entire franchise (but that's not exactly saying very much).
Australia's biggest challenges and opportunities lie in the health, prosperity and sustainability in the face of rapid global changes; climate is one piece of a much larger puzzle.
But I'm puzzled why big lasers would be needed, especially ground - based ones — how much brighter than the Sun in the designated wavelength would some such installation have to be, to be doing anything more than sunlight does now?
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