Not exact matches
In a
story about early toilet - training
last weekend (which followed recent articles
on the
topic in the Boston Globe, the Toronto Star, the Oregonian, the Tampa Tribune, Newsweek, and the Providence Journal), the New York Times reported that diapers fill landfills at a rate of 22 billion a year and cost families up to $ 3,000 per child.
Topics include the awards potential of «Shutter Island,» the Best Picture push for «Toy
Story 3» and our opinions
on the Best Picture winners of the
last decade.
Today I wanted to expand
on the
topic I wrote about
last week in my article, Focus
on a Strand; Describing Characters in a
Story (RL.3.3).
Pricing can be a heated
topic in the independent e-publishing world and almost everything in here will simply be my opinion based
on my experience of the
last two years, six novels, and numerous odd short
stories and novellas.
As is tradition for the series, there's a codec filled with optional conversations to further add colour to the
story as well as some truly strange but amusing
topics that you'd think would be the
last thing
on people's minds when
on a mission to save the world, though it does grant some quirky and very Metal Gear character to the game.
When I was Codex at Stanford
last year, AI was obviously a hot
topic but I heard from some of the companies involved that it's hard to recruit talented engineers to work
on AI because law is not sexy and there's not a lot of investment money flowing into... There are some success
stories but there isn't a ton of venture capital flowing into the legal startups and so there's an obstacle there that there just isn't a whole lot of energy being put towards it.
John Oliver dives into the
topic on Last Week Tonight, compiling 25 years of news
stories about how terrible these companies are and proposing a few fake, awful companies that he hopes will be confused with Equifax, TransUnion, and Experian.