Sentences with phrase «really smart approach»

Not exact matches

It's a really smart addition that makes a massive difference in how I approach the entire «Assassin's Creed» experience.
Evolved content repurposing is really about empathy, smart planning and a modular approach that delivers efficiency as well as a personalized experience for your audience.
Wenger himself is the master of the smoke and mirrors game and will never really give anything like a straight answer to journalists, preferring to opt for the «I'm far smarter than you» approach and just acts mysterious and all - knowing when questioned, OR acts like a petulant genius who gets angry when his wisdom is questioned.
Toronto's approach was smart, and it still really only held up for a 24 minutes.
I still a fan of P&T and I like your approach to create a really smart strollers, but I will not buy this model, sorry.
«We're just at the start of figuring out what a really smart, systematic, and aggressive approach to behavioral intervention can achieve,» Gabrieli says.
The first opportunity to really prove to the professors in the department how smart I may be, and that I am as smart as the other first - year students, is fast approaching.
But where Neighbors 2 really shines is how it takes a smart approach to gender dynamics.
You get the sense that Paltrow really opened his creative floodgates and poured all of the things he geeks out about onto the screen, from anime to Bergman to John Ford, a beautiful approach more filmmakers would be smart to adopt, quite frankly.
I thought their approach to trying to find a niche in the games industry was really smart.
The bottom - up approach to handling reform objectives was commented upon favorably even by the former Obama regulatory czar and noted expert on administrative law, Cass Sunstein, when on March 3 he wrote in Bloomberg, «Because the White House itself lacks the capacity to scrutinize the stock of existing regulations, the Trump administration was smart to call for task forces within each agency to do that — and to require them to engage with the public to see which regulations are really causing trouble.»
Daniel J. Fiorino, who directs American University's Center for Environmental Policy, said in an interview that using this approach is «a really nice example of smarter regulation,» because it gives firms and state regulators greater leeway in how they would meet a federal standard.
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