Sentences with phrase «ubiquitous nature of»

These sellers take advantage of the ubiquitous nature of property portals in their markets to advertise their property, and are willing to do everything else (open homes, negotiation, project management, paperwork, etc.) themselves.
Has the obviously ubiquitous nature of web searching changed the dynamic or relationship between student and teacher when it comes to instruction in electronic non-legal research and, as a consequence, the need for this instruction?
Given the ubiquitous nature of social media, there's a real chance that a juror — bound to consider only evidence admitted in court — will be prejudiced by reading information that falls outside of this bracket online.
Due to the delicate, unique, and ubiquitous nature of slip and fall accidents, there is a high burden of proof placed on the plaintiff.
In ice sheet areas distant from a dust source this maybe difficult, but on alpine glaciers mountaineers and glaciologists have long noticed the ubiquitous nature of these layers (Post and LaChapelle, 1962).
The artist says of his subject matter, «the non-subject and ubiquitous nature of faces is appealing to me as a stripped down structure to build upon; as a vehicle for abstraction, and as a straightforward symbol of communication.»
Last week, Gusford Los Angeles held its opening reception for Adam Mars» second solo exhibition at its gallery featuring his newest body of works, Once Upon a Time, We Weren't Stalkers, which sheds insight on the ubiquitous nature of social media with a dose of wry wit that is as telling as it is humorous.
The ubiquitous nature of clay accompanied by recognizable forms and supporting structures, is used to enhance to the visual interchange and sense of potential flux and instability.
The exhibition features work by artists who address how our vision, behavior, and beliefs are shaped by the ubiquitous nature of screens.
Given the ubiquitous nature of social media, we have the ability to surround ourselves with like - minded people, each with a vested interest in the gaming industry.
But even as administrators ramp up safety measures, the ubiquitous nature of technology, and particularly the widespread use of social media, makes their jobs harder.
Don't forget the ubiquitous nature of microlearning, leverage it wherever necessary.
The ubiquitous nature of this device is contextualized when we read reports like TIME's Qualcomm survey stating that 84 % of respondents could not go a day without their cellphones in their hands, while 44 % would leave their wallets at home, but would never leave their cellphones.
The need for schools to change radically has been driven largely by the demands of a knowledge age and the ubiquitous nature of technology saysGreg Whitby, Executive Director of Schools, Diocese of Parramatta, NSW and author of Education Gen WiFi (2011).
Matt Levinson looks at the ubiquitous nature of social media and its impact on the lives and identities of teens.
While some cinephiles decry the ubiquitous nature of the films, and many critics speak of superhero burnout, the subgenre shows few signs of slowing down.
The new SpikerBox features an «Interspecies Plant - Plant - Communicator» which demonstrates the ubiquitous nature of electrical signaling seen in humans, insects, and plants.
Given the apparently ubiquitous nature of neonicotinoids in our arable habitat, such an escalation may have been occurring for many years.
A bacteria colony on the ocean floor illustrates the ubiquitous nature of microorganisms.
And she goes on to say that even though the size of the effect seems relatively small, the ubiquitous nature of ambient air pollution exposure suggests that exposure to it might have considerable impact on stillbirth risk at the population level.
In the past, the home was often a place where teens could escape peer pressure for a time, but the ubiquitous nature of mass media has vastly reduced opportunities for respite.
But this goes to show the ubiquitous nature of the Tide's dominance.

Not exact matches

If order from disorder is supposed to violate the 2nd law of thermodynamics, why is it ubiquitous in nature?
Rather because it excludes faith it also excludes philosophical reason, thereby deciding all ultimate questions in advance on the basis of a liberal philosophy of nature and reason so ubiquitous as to be invisible.
In 1999, we are no longer reduced to «guessing» whether he was inspired or speaking only as a man: • adultery has lost its moral significance and become commonplace; • chastity has become a symbol of unhealthy development; • contraception in expectation of fornication is taught to children in the schools; • respect between the sexes has been replaced by mutual exploitation and / or competition; • marriage has lost its sacramental nature and its enduring promise; • statistically, divorce is common, teenage pregnancy is widespread, single parent and serially parented families increase, sexual disease is epidemic, intercourse is recreational, abortion is ubiquitous.
Whitehead was apparently the first to wonder why this plane - like geometry should not be applicable in nature, when its parallel, the point - like geometry, is so ubiquitous; he did begin noticing projective elements in the science of statics, and F. Klein's student, E. Study, explored the «plane-wise» representation of mechanical rotation, an idea further developed by G. Adams (in unpublished manuscripts).
Researchers hoping to design new materials for energy uses have developed a system to make synthetic polymers — some would say plastics — with the versatility of nature's own polymers, the ubiquitous proteins.
The units are determined by a universal constant of nature known as Planck's constant, ubiquitous throughout the quantum realm.
Many experts do fear the great homogenisation of nature, a world taken over by a few mongrel and ubiquitous species — brown rats and house sparrows, superweeds and cultivated crops.
The team found that eating hard - shelled prey, such as the trilobites that were ubiquitous at the time, would have fractured the critter's mouth plates, James Hagadorn of the Denver Museum of Nature and Science reported November 1.
«Ripples in sand, found on both beaches and dunes, are one of nature's most ubiquitous and spectacular examples of self - organization.
Concludes Peng, «given the ubiquitous and complex nature of tuberculosis, it is fortunate that the Kirschner group's work is rapidly advancing our understanding of the mycobacterium's interaction with the human host.
Nevertheless, because of the subtly ubiquitous and pervasive nature of mentoring, it is certain that an organized, optimized program, with senior management support, will yield more fruitful results than fortuitous mentoring left to happen without arrangement, optimization, organization, or encouragement.
According to the researcher, the ubiquitous nature and dynamics of these newly discovered clouds support the theory that they are condensing out of the hot gas that is lifted into the halo through supernova explosions.
That is not the case for kids today, who are unable to gain respite from social pain that occurs at school due to the ubiquitous and relentless nature of social media.
Just as she did in her recent Caldecott Honor title, Dark Emperor and Other Poems of the Night, and Ubiquitous: Celebrating Nature's Survivors, Joyce Sidman challenges young readers to look at their environment with fresh eyes in Swirl by Swirl: Spirals in Nature.
Birkhead's curiosity is contagious, and his deep respect for this most ubiquitous of nature's creations gives his words a degree of reverence that is both admirable and welcome.
Greentique Hotels delivers exceptional Costa Rica experiences that connect you to the magic of nature, and to the warm, good nature of Costa Rica's people, culture, and the ubiquitous, easy rhythm of life in the tropics that is «Pura Vida.»
At Pearl Lam, this is evident in the exhibition setting — a mystical, somberly - lit environment reminiscent of the Rothko Chapel — and in the works themselves, which, Moorhouse notes, «shake off the ubiquitous compulsion to interpret, encouraging instead a response to their intrinsic nature
The momentary nature of the Russian project captured Flavin's imagination, and in his «lamps» — the ubiquitous commercial light fixtures that were available in standardized lengths and colors — he found the perfect medium with which to investigate the transitory nature of light.
Today, artists who represent the water in their work build on a long legacy, but also refer to a ubiquitous feature of nature, which can appear peaceful but is ultimately much more powerful than man alone.
Nevertheless it is worthy to say that Daniel Lannes» works shown in German context lead us to reflect about disparate and contrary perceptions of the body and sex in Germany and in Brazil, whose catholic matrix associated with the indigenous and Afro culture has generated a society that moves between the taboo of sinful nudity and the natural drive of undressing amid a scenario of ubiquitous dense nature.
Luxury images of equestrian sports and wealthy leisure pursuits are repurposed, as are furniture ready - mades into new sculpture where an exchange between consumer image, domestic object and organic matter test the ubiquitous conventions of tradition against the unwieldy nature of the ageing process.
The snail, a symbol of nature created from recycled, artificial material, with a minimal carbon footprint, were chosen to convey three metaphors: the first relates to the critter carrying its home on its back, the second connects to hearing, since the spiral looks similar to the human ear, and the last refers to technology, with the symbol» @» (called a «snail» in Italian) ubiquitous in email communication.
It is difficult to understand how the first nine notes of Für Elise can be registered as a trade mark, just because it can be depicted as musical notation, when such a tune is ubiquitous, given its classical nature.
Like the Supreme Court's earlier decision in R. v. Tessling, these cases raised broad and important questions about the nature of privacy and autonomy in a world of ubiquitous information emanation.
This paper, Useful Void: The Art of Forgetting in the Age of Ubiquitous Computing, speaks to issues of a more broader societal nature that result from our obsession to store everything.
It's a ubiquitous part of nature.
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