Sentences with phrase «seen these problems first»

We see the problems first hand and try to help clients resolve these problems, sharing this knowledge can only be beneficial for our industry.
Even if you've never had an issue, and have friends who say the same, many vets and other dog lovers have seen these problems first - hand.

Not exact matches

The real significance of the Google Patent Starter Program is instead more subtle, and should be seen against the backdrop of other moves Google is undertaking to change the economic incentives that have made patents such a problem for the tech sector in the first place.
So when I first heard about Chicago - based KnowledgeHound, I was pretty excited because I saw it as a SaaS startup that was addressing a large and important problem: the inefficiencies in the way corporations were spending billions of dollars on market research and surveys.
Crowd funding wasn't started as business revolution, but to just solve a problem Danae saw first - hand.
Ever since «fake news» first started to get traction during Donald Trump's presidential campaign, it has been seen by many as primarily a Facebook problem because many hoax and fake - news creators use the giant social network as a distribution system.
The problem was, Rubin wasn't the first to see the attractions of the mass market.
The first step is to understand that I'm part of the problem — or at least that I'm at risk of being seen as selling an unnecessary service from just another unknown startup.
In the first, «Canada unlikely to see a ban on fund commissions», the mutual fund industry says commissions are not a problem because everything is disclosed in the prospectus.
For the first time since 2008, New Hampshire residents see a bigger problem for the state than jobs and the economy.
We answer thousands of customer support requests every month, and we see first - hand how these problems affect BitPay merchants and their customers.
As they had a large number of Scotch - Irish members living in western Pennsylvania, they were among the first to see the problems of the frontiersmen.
Smith sees this Christocentric hermeneutic as an important first step to solving the problem of pervasive pluralism.
By the time W finished his second term, I had graduated from college, come to terms with the fact that the criminalization of abortion is highly unlikely no matter the party in power, expanded my definition of «pro-life» to include Iraqi children and prisoners of war, and experienced first - hand some of the major problems with America's healthcare system, which along with poverty and education issues, contributes to the troubling abortion rate in the U.S. I remained pro-life idealistically, but for the first time, voted for a pro-choice president, hoping that the reforms I wanted to see in the healthcare, the economy, immigration, education, and for the socioeconomically disadvantaged would function pragmatically to reduce abortions.
First, Driscoll's so - called «fall» (from the Acts 29 p.o.v.) seems mainly to involve scandalous improprieties re: funds and books and tone and so on, but the theology that undergirds the spiritual abuse doesn't come under fire since Acts 29 not only doesn't see it as a problem, but generally holds to it as well.
For the more we examine the human situation — and the more we can do of this at first hand the better — the more we see that a deficiency of love is the root cause of nearly all our most refractory problems.
Subsumed under this goal are four operational objectives which may be seen as overlapping stages of treatment: Helping the alcoholic (a) to accept the fact that his drinking is a problem with which he needs help; (b) to obtain, medical treatment; (c) to interrupt the addictive cycle and keep it interrupted by learning to avoid the first drink; (d) to achieve a re-synthesis of his life without alcohol.
These, then, are the several levels of unity that bind together the diverse topics of the chapters to follow: first, the curriculum of education; second, the major problems of contemporary civilization; third, the values by which education is seen as a moral enterprise; and fourth, a concept of value as devotion to worth rather than to satisfaction of desire, together with an ideal of democracy as the social expression of basic moral commitment.
But how this is a problem can be seen only after we first descend to the level of an ordinary temporal occasion, A, and ask how it can prehend a past occasion, X, which is part of A's actual world.
In writing these words, James was addressing a problem that he saw in the first - century church.
The general implications of which I am thinking are, so far as I can see, independent of the divergences between the versions of «Relativity» advocated by individual physicists; their value as I think, is that they enable us to formulate the problem to which Bergson has the eminent merit of making the first approach in a clear and definite way, and to escape what I should call the impossible dualism to which Bergson's own proposed solution commits him.
Dear Chinese Friends, I appreciate the chance to be with you and to share some of my ideas with you, although I realize that it would be much better to listen first, at length, to you in order to learn what you see as the major problems you face.
There are, however, two serious problems to such an approach: First, it is difficult to see how some of these passages could possibly be interpreted in a way that is in keeping with Jesus of Nazareth; and second, even if this could be done, the process would necessarily do damage to the original intent and to the established scriptural meaning of these passages.
First, as a Presbyterian, I see no problem in the Church's overseers composing a creed or confession and setting it forth as authoritative.
(I am working on a possible solution to this Job Problem, which I will post later, but I want to see what you come up with first.)
For it will be seen, particularly in the first section, that even the Church's official permissive toleration of a moderate theory of evolution still leaves many questions unanswered, and in fact raises new problems.
From the moment Levin saw his beloved brother dying and for the first time looked at the problems of life and death in the light of what he called the new convictions that between the ages of twenty and thirty - four had imperceptibly taken the place of the beliefs of his childhood and youth, he was horrified not so much by death as by a life without the slightest knowledge of where it came from, what it was for, and why, and what it was.
But right away, we see problems with this, for Christ is the first chosen one, and He was not an unsaved sinner.
@ HowRu... Ok... I see the problem... sometime when you have 2 days to understand what the first chapter of Genesis REALLY says... let me know... it isn't what 99 % of Christians think...
You see, if evolution is true, science has an even bigger problem than Cain's wife to explain — namely, how could man ever evolve by mutations (mistakes) in the first place, since that process would have made everyone's children deformed?
I appreciate the chance to be with you and to share some of my ideas with you, although I realize that it would be much better to listen first, at length, to you in order to learn what you see as the major problems you face.
You see, it's the same problem as your first step, you cant just say «all of a sudden, WHAM living organisms capable of reproduction POOF «ed into existence».
Christians who go to public parks in order to present the gospel — when they first begin and people aren't sure what they're going to say, they are allowed to speak with no problems, but the minute they begin to speak about sin, righteousness, and repentance, I have seen people physically abused, verbally abused, and sent to the hospital.
I see a little problem here if this guy is not slightly over 2,000 years old; He can't possibly be a «first hand» witness to that alleged event.
I am probably not the first to propose any of the three principles, but the other proponents may not have seen their application to the theistic problem.
One of these was A.H. Johnson who was the first to mention the possibility of a «societal view,» and thereby elicited an explicitly negative reaction from Whitehead.8 Others who entertain this view are, mainly, William Christian, Lewis Ford, Marjorie Suchocki, and Jorge Nobo.9 Amongst these, Ford is the only one who links his holding of the «entitative view» to an emphasis on the imprehensibility of God's consequent nature10 (and who later finds this so much of a problem that he starts searching in other directions, though not in that of the «societal view»).11 The other three — Christian, Suchocki, and Nobo — do see possibilities for a conceptually coherent account of the prehensibility of God.
At the Sixth Assembly of the World Council of Churches in Vancouver, the problems of hunger and malnutrition that deeply divide the Third World from the First and Second Worlds were seen to extend into the body of Christ.
While the leading experts around the world — with well - funded, never - ending resources at hand — were trying (and dramatically failing) to become the first to fly, it was these two bicycle mechanics who didn't have a college education, who saw each new problem standing in their way of flight as one amazing step closer to solving the problem.
The problem Benbrook and Mellon see with the genetically modified food is that Monsanto, for example, is on its fifth - generation seed but the health and environmental effects of the first seed are still unknown.
It took a VERY long for me to see what my problem is, and it's a bummer to change, but I feel so much better and am learning to make the same things I loved in the first place.
I have the same «problem» I see something at the store and dying to make it at home just to realize I already have 10 other recipes that must be made first and time quickly goes by!
The problem I see is that I may have started germinating inside them too late — first week of April.
There is a strong feeling that the England international midfield star Jack Wilshere is going to rescue his Arsenal career and come back to be a first team regular again, as long as this season on loan at AFC Bournemouth sees him play the regular football that all of his injury problems have denied him at his boyhood club, the mighty Arsenal.
You would say that losaing one of your first choice centre backs just before a huge and possibly key game in the Premier League, so for Arsenal to lose both Lautrent Koscielny and Per Mertesacker must be seen as a complete nightmare and brings back all those horrible momories of the ongoing injury problems that have ravaged Arsenal for years.
Arsenal Football Club and injury problems have almost become synonymous with each other in recent years, so I suppose we should not have been too surprised to see our first choice goalkeeper pick up an injury in our last Premier League match, the damaging defeat away to West Brom.
The problem there is... hes not going to sign for a lower club than those mentioned, im guessing he would see out his contract first.
When you think that Walcott's first appearance as a sub after his cruciate ligament problem was back in November you will see what I mean.
The first half of this season was overshadowed by the contract problems with Alexis Sanchez and Mesut Ozil, but thankfully the Gunners refused to meet the exorbitant demands made by Alexis, but they did come to a compromise with Ozil which saw him re-sign on a massive wage of # 350,000 a week.
The report continues to note that while Amavi would ostensibly be signed to solve a problem position for the Villains, he would have to see off the challenge of Joe Bennett to establish himself as first choice.
This week it could be that while one end of the Premiership table is decided, at least West ham and Sheffield United are keeping things interesting, that we know exactly what Jose Mourinho will say if Liverpool beat them in the Champions League but we're dying to hear what he'll say upon losing his first Premier League title, that Tottenham have the most shockingly organised defense, that maybe Chris Coleman really wasn't the problem at Fulham, that Mark Hughes and Roy Keane will make for a fantastic battle of the Ferguson successors next season, or that we're excited to see whether Fat Sam can do it again.
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