So it is really lovely when I do get comments from people I've never met — and interesting to see what
sort of thing generates more comments too.
Not exact matches
«You reflect on your emotional feelings and then you
generate some
sort of recognition judgment,» researcher Paula Niedenthal says, «and the most important
thing that results is that you take the appropriate action — you approach the person or you avoid the person.»
This
sort of thing is heresy in Silicon Valley, where profit - first companies are often dismissed as «lifestyle businesses» incapable
of generating big returns.
Technically, if you have some
sort of transformer - like
thing that will pop out
of the trunk like a hardtop convertible that ratchets solar panels over the car... and provided you are in the sun, that would be enough to
generate 20 to 30 miles a day
of electricity.
If you found an opportunity to write a blog post, launch a social media campaign, get press coverage, or
generate some
sort of sales or lead gen offer in all
of those scenarios, then you're a newsjacker — and that's a great
thing to be as an inbound marketer!
The kids are ultimately just the side story, however; it's the behind - the - scenes machinations
of Whitford and his cabal that peak our curiosity while
generating the movie's wink - wink, nudge - nudge digs at all
things horror movie - related, like some
sort of deranged Greek chorus.
I am sure there is a niche market for that
sort of thing, likely not enough for it to
generate significant revenue.
With the exception
of the tiny handful
of writers lucky enough to
generate handsome earnings from their books or to have the full financial support
of a spouse or a trust fund (two
things I tend to longingly confuse), nowadays, most
of us need some
sort of gainful day job.
I bet a lot
of people in Generation X and Y will end up using this
sort of thing as a way to
generate income post-retirement.
I know that a currency transaction report is
generated, and there's some possible that this will trigger an investigation (though this is a one - time
thing, so I doubt they'll see any
sort of pattern).
[And maybe the best Ben Graham - type market in the world, if you can't resist that
sort of thing...] Of course, investor sentiment's improved accordingly — concern about the fate of the yen & Japan's debt burden has abated for now, and Shinzo Abe has generated new expectations of meaningful change and progress in terms of corporate regulation, shareholder value & governance, and investor activis
of thing...]
Of course, investor sentiment's improved accordingly — concern about the fate of the yen & Japan's debt burden has abated for now, and Shinzo Abe has generated new expectations of meaningful change and progress in terms of corporate regulation, shareholder value & governance, and investor activis
Of course, investor sentiment's improved accordingly — concern about the fate
of the yen & Japan's debt burden has abated for now, and Shinzo Abe has generated new expectations of meaningful change and progress in terms of corporate regulation, shareholder value & governance, and investor activis
of the yen & Japan's debt burden has abated for now, and Shinzo Abe has
generated new expectations
of meaningful change and progress in terms of corporate regulation, shareholder value & governance, and investor activis
of meaningful change and progress in terms
of corporate regulation, shareholder value & governance, and investor activis
of corporate regulation, shareholder value & governance, and investor activism.
The Playroom was quite rough and ready, and was little more than tech - demos, but it did show how developers can use the PS4 camera in tandem with the Dual Shock 4 — which, compared to its predecessors is a box
of tricks — to
generate some pretty unconventional gameplay, which even approaches the
sort of things the Xbox One will be able to do via Kinect.
Maybe this will bring about some hope that future digital manuals will read less like a computer
generated technical FAQ and more like the
sort of thing that was commonplace in the paper era.