I was sorry to
read about the demise of your firm a month ago.
Google sucks, they have a right to suck and I can't wait until I'm in my 50s
reading about their demise.
Not exact matches
If you want to
read more
about it, Peter Kafka at Re / code and Farhad Manjoo at the New York Times have both looked at the sequence of events that led to Gigaom's
demise.
With the emergence of social media and e-books over the last decade, the publishing industry has wrung its hands
about the possible
demise of
reading.
I have
read many reviews where people complain
about the
demise of the aliens, and I don't agree with them.
In the wake of Borders» bankruptcy, I've
read various theories
about what led to the bookseller's
demise.
With the
demise of OneManga, people are still whining
about it being gone and trying to justify that
reading manga there is the same as checking out a manga from the library.
(
Read about the origins, the history and the
demise of the ill - fated Borders Group)
Dave Bricker presents A World Without Borders — The End of The Bookstore posted at The One Hour Guide to Self - Publishing, saying, «In the wake of Borders» bankruptcy, I've
read various theories
about what led to the bookseller's
demise.
Noble thoughts, but misplaced I
read an interesting blog post the other day
about the
demise of print publishing.
The more I
read about other people's experiences, the more I'm convinced that this is probably the best reward credit card out there right now; especially in light of the
demise of the Citi 100K AAdvantage mile bonus.
Instead of studying the complex economic systems that sustained another sophisticated world, and their eventual
demise, we seem to prefer to
read about things that are wholly different from our own experience, like the ascetic saints of the late and post-Roman worlds, who are very fashionable in late - antique studies.
You can't
read the legal press without running across at least one article
about the
demise of the billable hour, and it's not all media hype.
Stories
about the
demise of Heenan Blaikie, which between Canadian Lawyer, InHouse, 4Students, and Law Times, we covered from many angles were also some of the most
read.
Indigenous people's access to better health care was considered less important because most Australian doctors repeatedly
read and believed that Indigenous people were an inferior and primitive race whose
demise was inevitable.7 Palliation was all that was required, or «smoothing the pillow of the dying race».7, 16 Some took this palliation more seriously, while many used it to excuse their guilt for suffering caused by colonialism.16 This belief in the doom of the Indigenous population did create a sense of urgency for researchers to collect information
about Indigenous people for science before it was too late.