The impact of paper Consider for a moment, the amount of paper the average real estate agent handles during a single typical transaction, from the marketing materials and often hardcopy of a CMA at a listing presentation, to the contract, addendums, title, appraisal and documents at the closing table, the stack of paper would likely be as thick as
an old telephone book for a major city!
Not exact matches
On the morning of 5 January, according to witnesses, about 150 people barged into the institute, severed the
telephone lines, ransacked the cupboards, tore thousands of
books, and damaged the writings on palm leaves, rare artifacts, and
old photographs in the library.
Back in the good
old days of 2007, when dinosaurs walked the Earth, nobody had really heard about eBooks, less still grasped how popular they'd become, allowing
old books a new lease of life; and how devices capable of holding entire libraries in their diminutive frames, and still capable of being used as — of all things,
telephones — would be ubiquitous.
Using an app to call a stored number leaves less room for error than the
old protocol of looking up a
telephone book and dialing manually.
In Our History of the
Telephone, the audience sees a spread in an
old book on the history of telephony.
But when he proposes links between his own historical field and that of climate science he drops all scholarly standards and quotes any
old conference paper or
telephone conversation he feels like; mad activists and conspiracy theorists like Oreskes and Powell; or Mark Maslin, a professor - cum - company director who combines his job at my
old university as palaeontologist or geographer or climatologist (all descriptions of his expertise taken from «the Conversation») with that of director of Rezatec Ltd, a company set up by the Royal Society as a «Leading provider of data - as - a-service geospatial data analytics» to serve those who may be worried to death by forecasts of eco-doom to be found in the
books and articles of Mark Maslin.