The most - desired are features the have been available for several years and are
now reaching mainstream consciousness.
Siracusa has said before he worries his nerdy, niche audience is a shrinking piece of a growing pie, as Apple products
now reach a mainstream audience.
On a story that has
now reached mainstream news channels, Adam Shatz writing for the The London Review of Books concludes that «what is most troubling about the call to remove Schutz's painting is not the censoriousness, but the implicit disavowal that acts of radical sympathy, and imaginative identification, are possible across racial lines.»
Not exact matches
Now this trend starts to
reach mainstream.
As we have added 22 new markets and expanded in already - opened cities, we are
now reaching a wider and more
mainstream audience.
Asia, Europe and Latin America are the main recipients of the expanded iTunes U. Apple basically
now has the farthest
reach out the
mainstream ecosystems that offer eTextbooks for purchase.
Natural living has
reached the
mainstream: we are
now far more concerned about the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the chemicals that surround us, and recognize that government regulations all too often fall short of safeguarding our health.
Now the climate engineers have
reached their goal of creating the all time snow record for Boston and that is what
mainstream media is spending most of their time talking about.
Now comes proof that Twitter is
reaching the
mainstream of the legal profession.
Holding an ICO event has become a viable alternative to VC funding as average ICO proceeds have
reached $ 15M which means that blockchain projects are
now able to raise as much funds through crowdfunding as a
mainstream startup could raise from VCs during Series A or B
This tangible thing that Google Photos
now offers is another step in the company's
reach for the
mainstream.
The currency is
now taken more seriously by media, regulators, the public and the
mainstream financial system, and has
reached its «IPO moment.»
Yet IBM director of research Arvind Krishn told Fortune he thinks 90 percent of the firms
now investing in blockchain will fail before this technology ever
reaches mainstream audiences.