Sentences with phrase «not out in the world»

It becomes impossible not to imagine that its characters, 24 - year - old Oliver (Armie Hammer), a doctoral student working for a professor of Greco culture in northern Italy, and 17 - year - old Elio (Timothée Chalamet), the professor's son, are not out in the world somewhere.
The problem with this is that people are hiding behind their computers and not out in the world being social with one another,» says Woertz.
More broadly, the research, by Matthew Feinberg and Robb Willer, reinforces the case that a large part of the climate challenge is not out in the world of eroding glaciers and limited energy choices, but inside the human mind.

Not exact matches

For one thing, the interesting things that happen to all of us on a daily basis don't tend to occur when we're sitting on our butts but rather when we're out and about in the world.
«I had a most extraordinary Christmas, and I have come to the conclusion that I would not have spent it out of the trenches for worlds,» another British soldier said in a letter to loved ones.
This is because they still think of geographic expansion as a costly «bricks and mortar» kind of roll - out process, and they just don't get the cloud and the fact that there are very modest costs to distributing almost anything digital today to everywhere in the world.
«If you are pulling out of something that pretty much every other country in the world is a part of, then that is not seen as being a leader.
As a first - time founder slugging it out in the ultra-competitive world of startups, the path isn't exactly a walk in the park.
When little Tommy has the ability to pop in contact lenses to play in a virtual world and doesn't come out of his room for a month, that generation of parents will express the same type of concern their parents did about spending time on Snapchat.
You can't expect to scale your efforts of earning money online or as a digital nomad from anywhere in the world, if you're not sending out emails.
Earlier this month, Tim Berners - Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, laid out a scenario in which computers don't just take jobs — they create and run companies themselves, eventually controlling the entire world ecoWorld Wide Web, laid out a scenario in which computers don't just take jobs — they create and run companies themselves, eventually controlling the entire world ecoworld economy.
Since I'm writing for Data Sheet this week, and not CEO Daily, I should point out that all of this Change - the - World - Don't - Be-Evil stuff started in the tech sector — even if some players (looking at you, Facebook) have wandered astray.
«Imagine a world where every one of us has a mission in life, has the courage to reach out to people who can help, has the will to succeed and measure success not in financial terms, but by how many people they help or touch along the way.»
«Our true competition is not the small trickle of non-Tesla electric cars being produced, but rather the enormous flood of gasoline cars pouring out of the world's factories every day,» wrote Musk in a 2014 blog post.
It's a real bummer when you see something that's so ubiquitous out in the world, that we can not miss, and they did a poor job on it.
In 2010, Fadell, who grew up in Michigan, founded Nest, a consumer - tech company that in October launched its first product — the world's first «learning thermostat» — that can figure out the temperature you prefeIn 2010, Fadell, who grew up in Michigan, founded Nest, a consumer - tech company that in October launched its first product — the world's first «learning thermostat» — that can figure out the temperature you prefein Michigan, founded Nest, a consumer - tech company that in October launched its first product — the world's first «learning thermostat» — that can figure out the temperature you prefein October launched its first product — the world's first «learning thermostat» — that can figure out the temperature you prefer.
«In a world where information travels very, very fast and through different media, figuring out whether information is public or not is challenging,» says Daniel Hawke, the former chief of the SEC's market abuse unit, who recently joined Washington, D.C., law firm Arnold & Porter.
In the current callous, cowardly world of dating, it's good to know there are some perseverent people left — 38 % of people reported someone wouldn't stop texting them after they tried to phase them out.
The question is if people buy into the idea that (1) smartphones really do harm their ability to take in the world (or, at least, are more «harmful» than «entertaining»), and (2) that they don't have the willpower to keep their noses out of their notifications, and thus need a phone that is designed to preempt most apps altogether.
At public speaking events in recent years, he's often opened by thanking organizers for inviting a Canadian banker to speak — «In most places right now in the world if you're a banker you don't even go out at nights.&raquin recent years, he's often opened by thanking organizers for inviting a Canadian banker to speak — «In most places right now in the world if you're a banker you don't even go out at nights.&raquIn most places right now in the world if you're a banker you don't even go out at nights.&raquin the world if you're a banker you don't even go out at nights.»
There are many things in the world out of your control, but running your company is not one of them.
Your brain can't distinguish between what you visualize and what's actually out there in the real world.
Whether they're tackling world hunger, improving education or helping people rent out the things they aren't using, companies of all sizes are seeking ways to make positive change in the world.
If your business idea has a reasonable chance of success and it's not completely different from anything else ever seen in the world before, banks may very well hear you out.
Its price is rising only because people all over the world are hearing stories of how others doubled or tripled their money in a short period — and they don't want to miss out.
Meanwhile the only folks who are killing it out there are the ones who are doing exactly what I'm telling you to do: quit with all the useless fluff, get out in the real world, get to work, gain experience, gain exposure, and quit searching for answers to questions that don't exist.
In the past three years, Guinness has seen world - record attempts spike 250 percent, but it's not because of crazy individuals growing out their fingernails or holding their breath.
Second, there are estimated to be over 1.5 billion Android users out there in the world, all of whom have phones that could theoretically get upgraded with Google Assistant (whether they will or not is a different story).
In the real world, I can't see pulse - tracking being shared this way at all, but I can see this becoming useful if I want to dictate a text to a friend while out jogging.
(Although, new research on this topic suggests that it is not as much of an advantage as you think, since our birth order is really about how we act with our family and not out in the real world.)
The best talk in the world will land flat if it's introduced at a moment when the audience isn't ready to hear it (just as, entrepreneur readers will note, even excellent, groundbreaking products fall flat if they're out of the sync with the market).
And while most of us may not update our online followers every half hour like Sullivan did in his heyday, fiending for a Facebook fix 85 times a day is still obviously a good way down the road towards online life crowding out real - world experience.
Finally, freakishly, there is an American president who does not want to lead the world, and doesn't want to do anything in the world except get out of Afghanistan and Iraq on an acceptable basis, doesn't care a fig for the western alliance, and doesn't think American strength or leadership is a good thing.
Apart from a few brilliant authors and composers, not much good has ever come out of Russia; and unless there is a sharp improvement in the outlook for that country it could drag the rest of the world, including Australia, into a crisis to rival that of 2008.
We rage against out - of - control CEO pay, demand stricter corporate governance, and yet we love the dominant leader who cuts through the noise, gives us something we didn't know we wanted and creates the most valuable company in the world in an industry — consumer electronics and entertainment — that commands just two or three per cent of household budgets and GDP.
Such long reigns are not out of the question in the corporate world either.
Cook argues that augmented reality is preferable to virtual reality for many applications, because «most people don't want to lock themselves out from the world... With AR you can, not be engrossed in something, but have it be a part of your world, of your conversation.
Hegarty came out swinging against what he views as an over-reliance on data in the industry right now, saying, «I've spent my life dealing with people who've got all the data in the world and yet they can't invent anything.»
After the workday, we're hungry to get out in the world and socialize, not just hunker in and space out in front of the television.
After I got out of the service I went to world famous Los Angeles City College and like I came down here and I was going to Los Angeles City College and someone suggested I go to an acting class in the evening and I said I don't know about that.
«In the small business world, you don't want to blow out your personal relationships,» Snyder says.
When the movie came out in 1999, almost two decades ago, the world was still trying to figure out how to address the Y2K bug, and people didn't have most of the technology in their houses that we use today.
He spent nearly a decade in the corporate world building high - end printers, not, it should be pointed out, manipulating plasma fuel for fusion experiments.
So the emerging dynamic is: Conservative asks question, Morneau argues fairness, Conservative points out something else in the world that obviously isn't fair, Morneau doesn't have an answer.
But, in the interest of privacy, he hasn't come out to the world, particularly to the shareholders, analysts and customers of Apple.
In a post-9 / 11, dot - com, Barack Obama world where institution topplers emerge out of nowhere, this is not exactly news.
When two out of three Internet users across the world is active on social media, you don't need much of an introduction to how all pervasive this medium has become in the last decade.
But Tepper said it's not good when that «learning curve» is playing out in real time in the world's second - largest economy.
Money may convince you that a position is right for you in the short - term, but I can guarantee that if you figure out later on that you hate what you do, no amount of money in the world will keep you there - because money can't buy happiness.
Well, when he's not attempting to put out the odd fire or two around the world in his spare time.
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