Sentences with phrase «topic in a recent post»

A recent post by book publishing expert Teresa Miller discusses this topic in her recent post, where she also shares a list of top fonts and combinations from Douglas Bonneville.
Notion Ink talked about a fair number of very technical topics in their recent posting, so check it out HERE.
My colleague Jordan Furlong came up with the perfect analogy on this topic in a recent post on his Law21 blog.
Indeed.com's blog included some excellent advice on this topic in a recent post, reminding us that «potential employers may look at any online profile of yours, so keep them up - to - date and free of content that would embarrass you.»
Sharon Graham, Canada's Career Strategist, covers this topic in a recent post, stating: «Templates don't account for strategy.

Not exact matches

In his recent survey of the topic (discussed in an earlier post here) McMaster University's Mike Veall reported a range values between 1.7 and 2.In his recent survey of the topic (discussed in an earlier post here) McMaster University's Mike Veall reported a range values between 1.7 and 2.in an earlier post here) McMaster University's Mike Veall reported a range values between 1.7 and 2.0.
That's the topic of a recent post he wrote on the Unreasonable Institute blog, in which he recounts a time in his younger days in which he completely burned himself out.
Joshua Benton, head of the Nieman Journalism Lab, described in a recent essay how residents of the small Louisiana town he was raised in posted and re-posted hoaxes and false news reports about Hillary Clinton and other topics on Facebook.
The New York Fed also issued an accompanying blog post which addresses the topic of transitions into delinquencies, examining recent developments in the consumer credit card market in more granularity.
It's been my recent New Year's tradition to see which posts most interested you in the prior year, and in 2017, the topics were all pretty weighty: Trump's child nutrition policies,... [Continue reading]
It's been my recent New Year's tradition to see which posts most interested you in the prior year, and in 2017, the topics were all pretty weighty: Trump's child nutrition policies, worries about school food, a science scandal, even a natural disaster.
My recent post on rare diseases and pediatric pain clearly resonated with a number of people, prompting my immersion in the medical literature and speaking with some experts and patients about these topics and about the difficulties patients with atypical symptoms -LSB-...]
Much research has been done on the topic of post workout nutrition in recent years and the scientific literature is almost unanimous in its findings: At one time carbohydrates were emphasized after a workout.
This is something I've touched on briefly in recent posts but it's really been bothering me, so I feel like this topic deserves its own post.
After our recent post about choosing to live in the same dorm as your significant other, I thought I'd bring up a similar topic I'm struggling with: should Should I worry that my boyfriend has a female roommate?
In a compelling recent blog post, Nathan Gibbs - Bowling warned that, as Washington State's new Teacher of the Year, he won't be taking positions on most of the hot policy topics of the day (Common Core, charter schools, etc.).
It may sound familiar in that what I view to be many of the best research articles published about value - added models (VAMs) were published in ER (see my full reading list on this topic here), but as more specific to this post, the recent «AERA Statement on Use of Value - Added Models (VAM) for the Evaluation of Educators and Educator Preparation Programs» was also published in this journal (see also a prior post about this position statement here).
See another recent article about the chaos a simple error in Mathematica's code caused in Washington DC's public schools, following another VAMboozled post about the same topic two weeks ago.
Other than this, no other information regarding the new car has been released although as we have said in our recent post on the same topic, there isn't much to guess about.
We featured a dozen uplifting books about a variety of topics in a recent blog post and invite you to add them to your reading list and share recommendations of your own.
This is more of a personal finance topic than an investing topic, but as I mentioned in my recent post Back to Basics, you can not invest if you can not save.
This topic was addressed in a recent New York Times «Well» blog post.
Some breeds can withstand the colder temperatures, as my blogging pal Jen Costello, of My Brown Newfies explains in her recent blog post on the topic: Newfies in the Winter.
I started watching it with mild interest, as it covered many of the topics I've already been harping on in recent posts:
That is how Dr. Scott Denning described it in his recent post on the topic, titled Cause & Effect.
You may have missed his recent posting about this topic: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/05/21/model-climate-sensitivity-calculated-directly-from-model-results/#more-86761 It is actually amazing that the global temperature result of climate models can be replicated with forcing inputs manipulated by his trivial formula, resulting in an almost identical output (r value of about 0.99).
If I were a fanatic as detailed by Bertrand Russell (see Anthony Watts» recent post on this topic), and I was obsessed with exposing the «big oil funding» of a hated demonic organization that opposes my views, * and * that organization has a member writing a column in the same national magazine as myself — often directly mocking my published views, * and * that same organization was in the process of inviting me to debate «for entertainment» at their big oil - funded conference, then I might be more than irritated.
On this topic there is an instructive comment in a recent post that puts things nicely in detailed perspective.
For more on the terrestrial foods topic, see my detailed discussion in this previous post, and this recent (March 30) ScienceNews report on yet another, largely anecdotal «polar bears resort to bird eggs because of declining sea ice» story (see photo below, based on a new paper by Prop and colleagues), which was also covered March 31 at the DailyMail («Polar bears are forced to raid seabird nests as Arctic sea ice melts — eating more than 200 eggs in two hours,» with lots of hand - wringing and sea ice hype but little mention of the fact that there are many more bears now than there were in the early 1970s around Svalbard or that the variable, cyclical, AMO (not global warming) has had the largest impact on sea ice conditions in the Barents Sea).
As the topic has received quite a bit of press due to winter's weather events in the UK and US, it would be great to have a realclimate post on recent developments and historical context of the science.
Lynch, who has written about this topic before, says in her most recent post:
I am also appreciative, Professor Woolley, of your concise description, in your comment, of your job as an academic in law; I'm somewhat gratified that it tallies with my own recent, and regrettably less concise, blog post on that topic: http://ctjester.blogspot.ca/2016/10/why-legal-academics-are-important.html.
Casey Flaherty's most recent 3 Geeks and a Law Blog posts (On Law Firm Marketing Bullshit and More Legal Marketing Bullshit and this week's Law Firm BS — Tier 3), were an apt instigator for me to continue the dialog about this topic of the evolution of LPM, its current standing and law firm and in - house counsel expectations.
As I said in a previous post on this topic (here), despite the comment pages on various newspaper websites, I'm hesitant to start seeing dark conspiracy theories behind any of the recent judicial appointments.
I think this case is of interest to ABlawg readers because it involves the judicial review of a mineral royalty decision and it also concerns appellate - level consideration of the standard of review applicable to a ministerial decision — a topic of recent interest in the judiciary and which Professor Olszynski explores in his recent ABlawg post «Of Killer Whales, Sage - grouse, and the Battle Against (Madisonian) Tyranny».
The topic of lawyer depression is a recurrent theme in the profession, afflicting not just American lawyers, as this recent and widely discussed Wall Street Journal article describes, but also lawyers in Australia and the U.K., as I've discussed in earlier posts.
A recent WSL Blog posting on legal outsourcing to India (a topic covered quite extensively on SLAW), reminded me I was going to mention the panel that spoke on this topic a few weeks back at the Canadian Law and Technology Forum in Toronto.
Further to my recent post on this topic, the evidence of biomechanical engineers is becoming more common in BC injury lawsuits.
In that same vein, I want to draw your attention to a recent post on Tom Peters» blog on the same topic.
This blog post follows Roger Smith's recent visit to us here in BC (where I was fortunate enough to have a fascinating lunch with Roger and others at the LSS offices) and Roger's own blog post (mentioned herein) on this topic....
Adam Czarnecki, an HR professional, shares a comprehensive breakdown of this topic in a recent YouTube video, in response to this LinkedIn post:
I've been quoted on career topics in articles by Forbes, the New York Post, Fast Company, the Detroit Free Press, Monster.com, the Cincinnati Enquirer, Yahoo! Finance, MSN Careers, and many others; see a list of my most recent media coverage and blog posts here.
In a recent paper, Tara Marshall and colleagues explored whether there were associations between the types of things people post in their status updates, their motivations for posting, and their personalities.1 Specifically, adult Facebook users in the U.S. completed online measures of personality (i.e., the degree to which they were extraverted, neurotic, open to new experiences, conscientious, and agreeable), neuroticism, and self - esteem, reported their typical Facebook usage, the amount of «likes» they generally receive, and the frequency and reasons for posting about topics in their status updateIn a recent paper, Tara Marshall and colleagues explored whether there were associations between the types of things people post in their status updates, their motivations for posting, and their personalities.1 Specifically, adult Facebook users in the U.S. completed online measures of personality (i.e., the degree to which they were extraverted, neurotic, open to new experiences, conscientious, and agreeable), neuroticism, and self - esteem, reported their typical Facebook usage, the amount of «likes» they generally receive, and the frequency and reasons for posting about topics in their status updatein their status updates, their motivations for posting, and their personalities.1 Specifically, adult Facebook users in the U.S. completed online measures of personality (i.e., the degree to which they were extraverted, neurotic, open to new experiences, conscientious, and agreeable), neuroticism, and self - esteem, reported their typical Facebook usage, the amount of «likes» they generally receive, and the frequency and reasons for posting about topics in their status updatein the U.S. completed online measures of personality (i.e., the degree to which they were extraverted, neurotic, open to new experiences, conscientious, and agreeable), neuroticism, and self - esteem, reported their typical Facebook usage, the amount of «likes» they generally receive, and the frequency and reasons for posting about topics in their status updatein their status updates.
I was delighted therefore when in response to my recent post on the topic Do All Couples Fight?
Question please: is there any post in this topic over the recent years, addressing the «Copyright» relationship at TREB: CB: Tribunal discussions?
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