Sentences with phrase «was ubiquitous when»

Media coverage of twitter — which was ubiquitous when they discovered it earlier this year and hasn't let up much since — tends to focus on the sensational.

Not exact matches

When it comes to search engine marketing, there may be no larger misnomer, no more archaic term than the ubiquitous keyword.
When combined with better speeds and more throughput, lower latency is also expected to enable ubiquitous augmented reality, virtual reality and video.
It's a real bummer when you see something that's so ubiquitous out in the world, that we can not miss, and they did a poor job on it.
When I recently returned to the festival, it was not the ubiquitous smartphone usage that was surprising but the endless battery charging stations.
Finally, have some sacrosanct times when you're with your kids or on vacation when you turn your work phone off, but can be reached in emergencies by land line or personal cell, (the way things were before mobile work phones became ubiquitous).
These days, bikes are so ubiquitous it's difficult to remember a time when bikes weren't present in everything from film to fashion ads to shots on Instagram.
While Google dominates the smartphone software market with its ubiquitous, customizable Android operating system, it's a relative pipsqueak when it comes to selling its own handsets.
It's hard to remember a time when the ubiquitous Like button didn't exist, but back in 2010, it was a novel concept.
In spite of all the ink that journalists, analysts, and pundits have spilled on Uber over the years, no mainstream article has focused on what I consider to be the most elegant feature of this now ubiquitous, high growth global service — no driver - partner is ever told where or when to work.
While AR has been used most widely in industries like retail, medical research, real estate, and sports (think to when the camera zooms in on the tennis ball hitting the line, or when the yellow yard line pops up while watching football), businesses both big and small are looking to take advantage of this increasingly ubiquitous technology.
The results are that SAAP is ubiquitous and it's now quite common for public companies to exclude most expenses when reporting earnings.
As touchscreens become more and more ubiquitous, it's also more and more annoying to try to use your phone when you're wearing gloves or mittens.
But when we stop to reflect, it is very odd that this most cruel of ancient Roman torture and execution methods has become the ubiquitous symbol of Christianity.
Yoga pants have become so ubiquitous they're almost unfashionable when it comes to activities outside of actual yoga - ing, so it's an interesting time for them to be commanding as much media attention as they are.
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).
The sweet allure of those ubiquitous holiday treats is hard to resist this time of year, especially when you toss in the homey smell of cinnamon, nutmeg, and allspice.
Rancho Gordo is ubiquitous for West Coast dwellers; their beans edge out all others when it comes to flavor.
But when I think about other ubiquitous fast food outlets and their brewed coffee, I think about Folger's being served at Wendy's, about Dunkin Donuts being owned by three creepy private equity firms (providing little or no information on where their coffee comes from), and another of the «big four» corporate roasters, Sara Lee «s Douwe Egberts division, supplying Burger King's coffee.
My mother always teases me when I make my own crackers because she can't imagine why I'd make something from scratch that is so ubiquitous in the stores.
I made this post in the throes of spring, when the lilacs were fragrant and abundant and ripe strawberries few and far between; one has since disappeared for the year and the other, become ubiquitous and innumerable.
That's when the «The Plan» became ubiquitous around town.
And while television audiences may grab snacks when those ubiquitous Cialis ads air, Roy must monitor what's happening on each of the 125 screens that line the wall opposite his control console so you won't miss critical shots after you return from your bathroom break.
This ubiquitous compact sport utility vehicle seems to everywhere at once when I am out and about — in fact there are three parked on our street right now.
He was an ubiquitous presence in the school,» said Darlene Larson, an associate superintendent for human resources at District 214 who was hired by Miller as an English teacher at Buffalo Grove High when it opened.
His profile took a hit recently when a federal judge castigated him for his ubiquitous media presence and sweeping statements about the «culture of corruption» in Albany, but no one in political circles is more feared.
When Quigley takes his polls, I'm guessing he'll find half about 30 percent favoring the ubiquitous incumbent Democrat.
Although the Internet has come to be seen as ubiquitous, people in the Middle East and India were reminded Friday of just how the Web is delivered to their homes and businesses when three key undersea cables were severed within a span of 38 minutes, knocking a large portion of users offline until traffic could be re-routed.
Chua was particularly struck, he says, when he once heard Hameroff point out that microtubules are ubiquitous in nature, while neurons are not.
The cell's most ubiquitous gateways are potassium ion channels — the importance of this type of ion channels was underpinned in 2003 when Roderick MacKinnon received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for resolving the first atomic structure of the bacterial KcsA potassium channel.
This was most easily noticed in my almost ubiquitous (though relatively mild) difficulty passing through doorways, going down tunnels (such as stairways and Jetways) and getting into cars when my brain was tired.
The case, formally known as United States v. Jones, has its roots in the technologically distant past of 2005, when smart phones, tablets, mobile apps, social networking and license plate cameras had not yet become ubiquitouswhen it was still possible to make a trip to the grocery store without leaving a megabits - long trail of digital footprints.
Says Sawaoka: «In general, we think there is great potential in better understanding how the behavior of individual organization members reflects on the image of organizations, and vice versa, especially at a time when ubiquitous online social networks, fast news cycles, and the blurring of privacy norms increasingly puts individual behavior on display.»
«Bubble - bursting drops are ubiquitous in everyday life and provoke the pleasant fizzy sensation when savoring a glass of sparkling wine, champagne or any soda,» said Seon.
Back in the good old days of 2007, when dinosaurs walked the Earth, nobody had really heard about eBooks, less still grasped how popular they'd become, allowing old books a new lease of life; and how devices capable of holding entire libraries in their diminutive frames, and still capable of being used as — of all things, telephones — would be ubiquitous.
There has long been a debate over how — and when — Earth obtained the water that is ubiquitous on our world today.
The amount of oxygen in a galaxy is determined primarily by three factors: how much oxygen comes from large stars that end their lives violently in supernova explosions — a ubiquitous phenomenon in the early Universe, when the rate of stellar births was dramatically higher than the rate in the Universe today; how much of that oxygen gets ejected from the galaxy by so - called «super winds,» which propel oxygen and other interstellar gases out of galaxies at hundreds of thousands of miles per hour; and how much pristine gas enters the galaxy from the intergalactic medium, which doesn't contain much oxygen.
When I think of Mexican cuisine I don't think of the cheese and rice - laden Tex - Mex that is ubiquitous in America.
And even though salt is ubiquitous in American diets today, cutting back can be relatively simple: Eat less processed food, buy low - sodium or sodium - free products like soups and condiments, avoid the obviously salty restaurant items (hello, cheese fries), and use less salt when cooking your own meals at home.
So many people are finding that they have sensitivities to wheat and / or gluten these days, or they just find improved digestion by eliminating it (as is the case for Paleo / Primal dieters), that challenges come up when trying to recreate a favorite dish without these ubiquitous ingredients.
The significance of detox becomes apparent when you understand that our main liver detox gene, P450, has been crippling by the industrial seed oils ubiquitous in the food system thus hindering our ability to detox; recent studies have found that soybean oil, canola oil (and vegetable oils as they typically contain soybean / canola oil) significantly affect the expression of many genes that metabolize drugs and other foreign compounds that enter the body, suggesting that a soybean oil - enriched diet could affect one's response to drugs and environmental toxicants.
Many of us eat when we're not hungry because tasty convenience foods are ubiquitous.
Each spring, I am blown away when I walk into Home Depot and I'm greeted by prominent displays of economy - sized containers of Roundup, Monsanto's ubiquitous glyphosphate.
GT Dave started his ubiquitous kombucha brand, Synergy, when he was still in high school, after his mother used the fermented beverage in her remarkable recovery from cancer.
Is there anything more ubiquitous than the striped shirt when summer hits?
This was one of those trends I was really on the fence about when the ubiquitous Chloe «Drew» bag came on the blogging scene.
One day when you come to Malaysia, come look for those banana fritters; they're ubiquitous and DELISH (and super oily and not the best for the body, but can be worth it!).
When I lived in the U-District it was as ubiquitous as pizza and all - nighters.
Largely, though, the combat breaks down to the quality of one's collection, which can generally be handled pretty organically with what one collects in a given level; money is usually ubiquitous enough that purchasing a solid stock of basic stickers from the shop in the game's main town is within reason, though special stickers, created with the aforementioned polygonal objects, are significantly more expensive, and also of paramount importance when it comes to solving puzzles.
Yet that stylistic clarity is as much a product of the film's often strained cinematic high points, such as when Mosab is told «welcome to the slaughter house» by a prison guard, a line clearly inserted to elicit a thriller - order ethos that's too easy a gesture to the ubiquitous violence of the war's innumerous military and civilian conflicts.
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