Sentences with phrase «viable enterprise»

If successful this will lead the short list of start - ups into the accelerator stage, which will seek to turn the ideas into viable enterprises over a 13 week period ending in mid-April 2017.
They began to gather together, exchange ideas and gradually this exchange of information led to the fact that small developers began to pull themselves up and grow into viable enterprises,» Marianna Krjakvina, the head of Estonian branch of the International Game Development Association (IGDA), said in a recent interview with Delovye Vedomosti (a Russian - language financial newspaper published in Estonia — editor).
What's missing is an operable fusion reactor to make mining the moon's helium - 3 and carting it back to earth a viable enterprise, but that too is in development.
It said Europe needs to improve credit to viable enterprises.
If completed, it will be the first offshore wind farm in the U.S., and if it is successful, it could prove that wind power generated by turbines off the coast is a viable enterprise similar to onshore wind farms, which generate about 4 percent of America's electricity.
Over the span of a half - century, The New York Review of Books has remained a viable enterprise of American society and political affairs, steadfast criticism, and as evoked by its title, analysis of popular literature.
«This was my baby and it was in the hands of state bureaucrats to decide whether it was going to become a viable enterprise
It was the year self - publishing finally stopped being about the outliers and was recognized by media outlets and the general public as a viable enterprise for thousands of writers.
They were priced as if banking was going to cease to be a viable enterprise.
In ways successful and not, this show is about trying to make things threatened with extinction look alive: a neighborhood under attack; the mid-tier gallery as an engaged and viable enterprise: and the market - squashed ideal of art as a moral force.
I am of the view that these cases reveal an emerging presumption that the corporation's pre-tax income will be assumed to be available to the shareholder payor for the payment of child support unless compelling evidence is led by the payor spouse to support the conclusion that re-investment is necessary to sustain the company as a viable enterprise.
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