Sentences with phrase «provides nice overview»

The decision provides a nice overview on the law of costs in the province of Ontario, including the principles which inform the court's decision making, how offers to settle factor into the analysis, and how brining a lawsuit in the wrong monetary jurisdiction can have significant consequences.
He provides a nice overview of the current players working in the visualization of legal research.
It provides a nice overview of the key climate characteristics for each region.
Here's my 2001 opinion piece on the tradeoffs, and here is Jamie Rhode's PhD, the first on BECCS, which still provides a nice overview.
If you want more info on the immune system, this site provides nice overview of the system: here.
If you want more info on the immune system, this site provides nice overview of the system:
David Van Blerkom, a professor of astronomy at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, provides a nice overview, focusing on the second part of the query:
The Newsweek article is a good place to start, since it provides a nice overview of what widgets can do and how they're becoming easier and easier for individual users to make and distribute (upcoming Apple and Microsoft operating systems will come embedded with both widgets and the ability to create more).
The new U.S. trailer offers a closer look at Niccol's film, providing a nice overview of the story and tone overall.
The Lawyer's Weekly (Canada) also had a recent article providing a nice overview on legal project management: Michael Rappaport, «Legal Project Management's New Billing Paradigm» (14 May 2010).
Donovan and Watson provide a nice overview of the different purposes and function between SSRN and an institutional repository.

Not exact matches

The following table provides an overview of the various funds the company runs, and the AUM: While checking some multiples is a nice way to get a ballpark figure for the business value I prefer looking at the actual cash that the company is producing: that is what matters in the end.
For readers not familiar with her work, there is a nice online article called «Information Search Process: A Search for Meaning Rather than Answers» that provides a basic overview of the 6 stages of the information search process:
This process has been called «machine learning» and Surden gives a nice introduction to this idea in his Codex talk and provides an excellent overview in the first part of his article.
The authors do a nice job in providing an overview of the different parenting styles and they are in line with what I suggest in my article regarding the most effective ways to say no (as an authoritative versus authoritarian parent):
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