Sentences with phrase «recent web post»

«In our view, its intrinsic value must be zero,» Stefan Hofrichter, the company's head of global economics and strategy, wrote in a recent web post.

Not exact matches

The amount of Web content has grown exponentially in recent years, much of it posted without ever having passed in front of a proofreader's eyes.
According to a leaked screenshot of Fusion's web traffic that was posted by Gawker, the site had less than 35 readers looking at its top story on a recent day.
In a recent posting on PrisonTalk.com, a Web site where nearly 50,000 members seek and share comfort and advice about their relationships with inmates, McDonald asked, «How many men marry women in prison?
Below are the Parenting Articles I've posted on Heligirl and guest posted around the web, with the most recent at the top.
As the number of Facebook members signed up for the «Boycott Target Until They Cease Funding Anti-Gay Politics» page neared 78,000 in recent days, Facebook personnel locked down portions of the page — banning new discussion threads, preventing members from posting videos and standard Web links to other sites and barring the page's administrator from sending updates to those who signed up for the boycott.
Writing yesterday, Goldberg steps up and calls bullshit on the concept that liberals naturally own the web, citing Jose Antonio Vargas's recent Post article as an example of this kind of thinking:
The Lazio campaign has posted its own Web videos throughout the primary season, including a recent one supporting an ongoing effort to entice voters to give $ 29 to «Break the Cycle» of Cuomo's 29 years in politics.
(Donovan said as much to me himself during a recent «Capital Tonight» interview, which isn't a «published report», although we did post it on the Web).
A recent article from Web MD suggests that adhering to a Paleo diet may help post menopausal women lose weight, as well as reduce their risk of diabetes and heart disease.
It's a curration of great fashion blog posts from around the web, and a recent Fashables post just so happened to be part of the list.
THE JAKARTA POST — Oct 6 — According to a recent article in Web in Travel, China now has two generations of one - child families, in the words of Harry Hui, CMO of PepsiCo Intl, «one of the loneliest generations in the world».
«Single Mormons - Mormon Singles, Mormon Dating, Mormon Date, Mormon Personal Ads, Mormon Man, Mormon Woman» - it's the title of the site.The most important text on the main page - «Featured Biker Dating Sites», «Dating Sites On The Web Network», «Featured Millionaire Dating Sites:», «Recent Blog Posts», «Featured Millionaire Dating Sites», «love song of the day — bryan adams — heaven», «Featured Black Dating Sites»,"BlackPeopleMeet.com Dating Site Review — The # 1 Dating Network For Black Singles», «Featured Republican Dating Sites:», «Additional Wealthy Dating Sites:».
«BBW Dating - BBW Date, BBW Singles, BBW Personal Ads, Big Beautiful Women» - it's the title of the site.The most important text on the main page - «Love Song of the Day — Steelheart — I'll Never Let You Go (Angel Eyes)», «Meet Sexy BBW's On Ashley Madison», «Dating Sites On The Web Network», «Featured BBW Dating Sites Of The Month:», «Find BBW Singles Near You», «Recent Blog Posts», «eNews & Updates».
Take, for instance, his recent post on the Fordham Institute's Web site: «Montgomery County's elementary school curriculum: Where's the beef?»
Its web site posts an array of small schools resources — links to small schools and other organizations; research, academic papers, and digests of recent media articles; plus a variety of tools for interested educators and parents.
If the Web site provides an RSS feed — and most do — Pageflakes will automatically add a new box to your main page that includes links to the five most recent articles posted on that site.
I will visit your web journal routinely for Some most recent post.
As I described in a recent post, Eisler said that what made the decision to go with Amazon easy was that the web giant promised to not only get his books to market faster — both in print and electronic form — but also offered to sell them at a lower price than the traditional publisher, and apparently (although the terms of his deal weren't released) gave him a bigger share in the proceeds to boot.
Amazon is trying to recoup market dominance in the United States by offering a Web Browser in its Kindle Devices this summer, as a recent job posting indicates.
If recent videos of the iPad posted on Apple's Web site are any indication, Apple will be selling the same books at higher prices...
As I described in a recent blog post, Colleen Jones» Clout: The Art & Science of Influential Web Content, is one of the most important books to be published during the first half of this year.
If you wish for to increase your familiarity just keep visiting this web site and be updated with the most recent gossip posted here.
With my recent post, «Reclaim Blogging: Why I'm giving up Twitter and Facebook» making all that fuss all around the Web, obviously I've been reflecting a lot on blogging in general.
Of my writings published online on this blog and The Huffington Post since last April 2010, the ones that have in any small way gone viral, very relatively speaking, were those in which I wrote fast enough about current hot news items or ones relating or engaging with artworld celebrities: as one example, «My Whole Street is A Mosque,» written within 24 hours of the news cycle surrounding the proposal for a Islamic cultural center near Ground Zero, was picked up by various web aggregators; «Looking for Art to Love, MoMA: A Tale of Two Egos» also did very well because of my speculation about how or whether Marina Abramovic peed during her performance «The Artist is Present» at MoMA, a subject of much prurient curiosity (interesting speculation was illustrated online at New York Magazine and resolution of the mystery came in the Wall Street Journal's blog, «Speakeasy»); «Anselm Kiefer@Larry Gagosian: Last Century in Berlin,» where I tucked a critical response to Kiefer's recent show into a bit of reporting about how Gagosian Gallery was using the NYPD as its private police force, also created a spike on my Google analytics; more recently I could perceive a noticeable uptick in my readership as well as in the number and enthusiasm of my Facebook friends» comments for «Should we trust anyone under 30?
As a recent (2015) web posting from the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council notes:
The «Take Artists Space» web site mentions the event in a recent post.
Back to original post: For more, explore the Energy Department's Smartgrid.gov Web site and read Ken Silverstein's recent Forbes post, «Smart Grid May be Shortest Route to Obama's Green Energy Goals.»
First came the Web posting of new analysis by the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project pointing to the dominant role of humans in driving recent climate change.
Bloggers skeptical of global warming's causes * and commentators fighting restrictions on greenhouse gases have made much in recent days of a string of posts on Climateaudit.org, one of the most popular Web sites aiming to challenge the deep consensus among climatologists that humans are setting the stage for generations of disrupted climate and rising seas.
For an analysis that, in contrast, reflects an understanding of the scientific evidence that is generally shared in the climate science community, see MacCracken's recent journal article, «Prospects for Future Climate Change and the Reasons for Early Action,» which is posted on the Climate Institute Web site here (3.2 MB).
In a recent post on her Web site, No Frakking Consensus, she provides excerpts from scientists, ethicists, and activists who excuse or even lionize Peter Gleick for stealing Heartland Institute budget documents, impersonating a Heartland board member, misrepresenting himself to bloggers as an anonymous «Heartland insider,» and palming off as genuine — maybe also authoring — a fake climate strategy document in which Koch supposedly funds Heartland to keep opposing voices out of Forbes magazine, sell doubt as their product, and dissuade teachers from teaching science.
Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach I was reading through the recent Trenberth paper on ocean heat content that's been discussed at various locations around the web.
Since writing that post on Monday, I have come across two other recent stories involving fake or impersonated Web sites.
We were thus happy to read Steve Matthews» recent post at the Law Firm Web Strategy blog, in which he nicely lays out the arguments for and against custom domains for law firm blogs.
-LSB-...] My most recent post at Stem Legal's Law Firm Web Strategy blog focused on an overlooked aspect of lawyers» effective use of Twitter: their Twitter biography.
To round things out, we'd also like to mention some of our most recent and frequently shared posts from Law Firm Web Strategy:
Ambrogi cites a post by Jason Koettke at Law Geek, which examines recent and upcoming Web - related conferences, where the percentage of women speakers ranged from zero percent to 31 percent, with the exception of the upcoming Blogher Business Conference, where all of the speakers are women.
Kirchberger highlights legal Semantic Web technology — such as that discussed in Dr. N \» faria Casellas \ rquote s recent post on legal ontologies — and government eportals — like Austria's HELP service — as promising means of offering valuable context to nonlawyers using legal information.
At a recent CBA / SCC Liaison Committee meeting on Posting of Factums on the Web, the Supreme Court Justices raised questions concerning a number of legal and practical issues: * Who holds copyright in factums?
I have posted two recent columns devoted to new and newly discovered Web sites of interest to lawyers, A Hodgepodge of Newly Launched Sites and A Round - up of New and Interesting Sites.
The first, over at Volokh, discusses a recent case out of Tennessee, State v. Cobbins, where a judge denied defendants» motion to require a media outlet to disable a portion of its Web site enabling Web users to post comments (mostly anonymous) about the pending case.
My recent post, A Web source for municipal codes, brought word from Ken Kozlowski of several other sources, which you can read more about here on Ken's blog.
But the Honorable Madam Justice Côté's very recent past has just been posted to the Internet on the Canadian Judicial Council's web site.
«Ridesharing is moving Austin forward,» Uber said in a November 2015 web post, adding that «Recent news reports indicate DWI crashes in Austin dropped 23 percent since ridesharing entered the market.»
In a recent situation, Toyota U.S.A. posted some photos on one of its Web sites — photos it obtained from the photography site, Flickr — without permission of the photographers.
In response to one of our recent posts, Rick Georges listed some specific concerns about the use of web applications.
Ambrogi identifies a bunch of Web sites launched in recent months, such as JD Supra, docstoc and Tractis (see also, my earlier post), all of which help lawyers get noticed, keep informed, manage contracts and get research help.
A link in a recent post by Patrick Cormier — La pratique du droit Comment exploiter les technologies web 2.0?
A recent posting on the CALL - L discussion list points out that some of the presentations from the recent Canadian Association of Law Libraries Conference 2007, held earlier this month, have been posted to the CALL web site here.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z