Sentences with phrase «of sides of the blog»

Not exact matches

Once I learned all about the business side of things, the pair (who, by the way, have inside jokes and act like old friends), told me they were going to Google the next day to do a live Hangout video chat with the tech blog Mashable.
Financial Mentor is one of my favorite money blogs that teeters on the more serious side of things.
UPDATE: While the point of this blog entry wasn't to criticize Dyson, using the Dyson Airblade as an example might have the unfortunate side - effect of lending credibility to the reports cited.
The latest set of shots comes from gadget leaking blog Slash Leaks, which includes a photo that claims to show both the hotly - anticipated phone and its larger rumored counterpart, the Galaxy S8 +, side - by - side.
But after a couple of days, I started noticing that the side of my blog had a blog counter.
After you enter your blog post URL into Lumen5, Lumen5 will display your blog post text on the left side of the app.
Actually free services: I'm a little hard pressed to think of Internet features that still fall into this category, other than Wikipedia, personal blogs and piracy, which is ultimately going to be countered either by copyright cops on the down side or superior, paid legal services on the upside.
In 2015, I hired someone to take over the editorial side of the blog and started focusing on the business side of things.
And the nice part about it is that everyone's getting into all sorts of different income streams which they share on their blogs:) For some it's dividend stocks, real estate, or passive income, and others it's entrepreneurship or hustling on the side, etc..
Over the course of her blog, though, she got a job, grew her side income, attended FinCon, and now works for herself.
In my September 1 blog entry I argued that economists typically focus on managing the asset side of the balance sheet, and almost never on the liability side, because they implicitly understand both the extent and the nature of economic growth to be almost wholly a function of the ways in which assets are managed.
The blog will always be a fun side venture, not something that carries me across the threshold of FI, but I'm happy to see that readership and excitement here at WYOR has ticked upwards with these last few months.
Starting a blog might be the perfect side hustle — you can do it on your own time, build multiple passive income streams, meet new people, and unlock tons of new opportunities.
So far, we've only shared our annual expenses on our blog but never disclosed the income side of the equation.
I'm still figuring out the passive side of blogging to get a consistent stream, but, my blog has opened up my freelance writing ability (active income).
It's a bit of a dilemma, and one that might be better explored in a new side - blog, as I don't want to confuse this one even more with the active / passive debate.
Although Lagarde's official blog post from last month was titled «Addressing the Dark Side of the Crypto World,» yesterday's entry, «An Even - handed Approach to Crypto - Assets» had a different tone.
The ubiquitous share buttons you see along the side of blog posts, many of them come from SumoMe.
Companies that want to avoid making business blogging mistakes can hire a blog consultant like the folks at TopRank or any of the contributors listed in the left side bar of Business Blog Consultblog consultant like the folks at TopRank or any of the contributors listed in the left side bar of Business Blog ConsultBlog Consulting.
Editor: James Scherer About the Blog: The Wishpond Blog explores all sides of running a successful digital marketing effort.
On the influencer side, the insights that you get with linking and tagging brands in Stories shows you how many people clicked on the link so you have a better idea of how much of an impact you're generating for brands and if I'm linking to a blog post (another way I drive traffic to my blog) then I can see how many people clicked on the link from my stories.
Gary wrong again, Gary wrong again: I was a guest before this on this blog: Even check out Martin Zender; The World's most outspoken bible scholar facebook; You will find me there; he knows me, and his crew knows of me; Father has others too that have been with me for years that are not in my city through their ministries also that have come up along side of me, but I do not want you to come against them as they have their own trials to overcome, therefore; no names given there, they also know me and my testimony: I am God's workmanship therefore, I was brought up in Christ along side witnesses as His testimony: Gary; this is going to be shocking, but because God does not inform you of a thing, means to me, that He has kept very much from you: Now why would that be?
I even got questioned for detracting from the thread, though my intent was to offer my personal struggle with what the thread eventually evolved into, while feeling for genuinely for Julie (based upon her willingness to divulge to a public blog her side of the story), and while questioning all along what really happened given others» pov on all this.
Considering the consistent treatment of this topic on this blog & the magnitude of the event (for both sides of the debate), that's a substantial miss.
I used to think that CNN was just playing into the hands of religious followers by having a belief blog... now, with articles like this one, it seems more likely they are subtly making fun of them by showing the absurd side & how religion evolves to meet the needs of the current religion industry to keep butts in seats.
Heaven sent — just disappointed — I was hoping for some lively debate on these blogs... willing to listen to the other side, but instead they continue to tell us what they are not, instead of confidently
i have been reading these blogs and laughing at both sides of the argument.
This public reviling of Tony Jones, et al. puts this blog and TWW on just about the same moral footing as the other side.
It tells me that you care about me:) What I have witnessed is that it isn't really natural for folks to care about others, especially strangers on the other side of a blog.
ok i've decided — after soul searching and observing my and other's reactions to these religious blog news on CNN learning more about religion from this alone and about the mideast than from anywhere else in my USA educated life i need to be more tolerant of others having religious based governments THAT is what is confusing me — that religion are governments are not seperated that is hard for much of USA population to understand perhaps it is for me i think you would have to actually live in a society like the mideast to truly understand it i mean — actually be part of the society the religious part is truly offputting — since most in USA seperate church and state like — church is for faith and imagination and celebration and family and community involvement and state is for protection and education and health and infrastructure, etc., for all it is hard to be serious about religion — when the serious side of society is state it is hard to see religion being the serious side of enforcement — and the state enforcing the faith based side of society egad — doesn't god get lost in all that?
There are obviously some bigots on this blog, on both sides of the faith fence.
you can see a google - translated version by clicking on the right side of the page where it is said «blog translation» or you can go here: http://translate.google.com/translate?hp&hl=en&u=http://tommyab.wordpress.com?sl=auto&tl=en
I know things get vicious from all sides here in this anonymous blog, but imho your Santa case is way too simplistic to begin to address the frustrations, and more importantly, real effects many of us face from the ultra-religious extremists.
I'm thinking this is a bit more a response than you or I expected and it's partly in response to the number of divisive comments on both sides of the debate that have been posted in this blog.
I got the distinct impression (from older of your blog posts I believe) that you and New Directions took a fairly solid «side B» stance, that same - sex acts were sin, and that a large portion of your ministry was devoted solely to gay Christians who took a firm decision on the celibacy route (albeit with a much greater amount of respect and acceptance for those who chose to partner.)
My good friend Tim C. has a wonderful post on the blog site called, «This side of the Cross».
I stared at the page with these four messages for a long time before I realized that someone had turned the side of his house into a vast analogue to a blog.
CNN, Thank you for at least presenting differing sides of this debate and the blog to see peoples input.
Your insistence on repetitively spamming the blog with your collection of extremely one sided sources is childish in the extreme.
If all the comments on belief blog were a cartoon there would be a Scotsman (not a true one), there would be a straw man on fire, and there would be Hitler (for the Hitler card) and the three of them would be used as tennis balls being batted back and forth between the opposing sides.
In fact, as I began my journey out of the institutional church I was questioning everything from both sides and the responses I got from the blogger you mention were downright rude and I haven't commented on his blog since (unless I totally agreed with him and could» t resist).
ok, ok, ok, i get it both sides think they are telling the truth there are no lyers here on this blogs only misinform people talking about two separate subjects yet thinking they are talking about the same thing the existence of god... one side believe the other doesn't what's wrong with that... sooner or later they'll changed their minds and one side will believe and the other won't so the arguement will forever be the same about two separate aguement on the same blog... but its definitely entertaining to read the comebacks... keep up the good work you all... its just as fun to read what the believer have to say as to what the nonebeliever have to say... after all it keeps all getting to know eachother better on what we believe right???
@HeavenSent:» GodsPeople, image all the non-believers on this blog, plus, their cronies... being on the other side of the divide in paradise.»
GodsPeople, image all the non-believers on this blog, plus, their cronies... being on the other side of the divide in paradise.
now i've started another blog, theartsblog, in hopes of expressing that side of my personality too.
As Damian Thompson asked in his Telegraph blog, «where was the Catholic spokesman to put the Church's side of the story?»
Hearing and reading both sides of issues like this is what I think your blog is all about.
Following the attempts by some of the commenters (from both sides of the debate) to get simple «yes» and «no» answers from each other to theological questions, I have a REAL LIFE situation to pose to the readers of this blog, and I want you to state with a simple «Yes» or «No» whether you believe the following woman is saved or not.
And your blog posts and IG entries are amazing and yes, I am jealous — but in an aspirational way I only wish the best things for you, I am a huge fan of yours, from the other side of the pond.
Search for «pumpkin spice sheet cake» on the right hand side of my blog for the recipe!
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