Sentences with phrase «whole lot more effort»

Google Pixel devices will require a whole lot more effort than a Nexus device to modify — if the user wants to go through the trouble of doing so.
I mean, it takes a whole lot more effort to sit on a fence than stand firmly on either side of it, right?

Not exact matches

Action: Say no to always - on voice assistants Who is this for: Anyone who values privacy more than gimmickry How difficult is it: No real effort Tell me more: There's a rash of smart speaker voice assistants on shop shelves these days, marketed in a way that suggests they're a whole lot smarter and more useful than they actually are.
Just as a whole lot of us think, he (Per) also thinks more effort should be put in by the team.
Foods with less sodium and more whole grains are often thought of as less flavorful, but there are lots of efforts underway to change that.
And for scientists inside China and abroad, the ambitious reform effort is about to get a whole lot more interesting.
This involves very little cost and honestly not a whole lot of effort, but may leave your friends jealous -LSB-...] Read more...
While not, for my money anyway, a whole lot better than their previous effort, it is a whole lot more Radiohead.
His character's elitist, intelligence - fueled humor is paired with a whole lot of poignancy, which, though feeling somewhat out of place alongside Emmerich's bombast, makes Ifans's effort all the more memorable.
A dog with developing kidney disease will feel the need to drink and urinate more in an effort to keep his body free of waste — a job his kidneys once did with a whole lot less effort.
During our conversation, we talked about exactly what «husbandry» means, and how we can work it into our training routines without a whole lot of effort and time commitment, we also talked about how she gets her pet clients to buy in and participate in husbandry training solutions, and a few other little tips and tricks, like using behavioral momentum to make hard stuff easier and the training sessions more fun.
You really did a lot, both in traveling and for the blog I've enjoyed a lot reading about your trip in Peru and Bolivia (I had read a few of the Peru posts but did not have the whole picture), and it was very interesting to read about the blogging part (I'm also on a long term trip, and writing a blog, even though I'm not doing a lot of effort to make it grow... I do not have a business mind and enjoy much more to write and take pictures than struggle with SEO and marketing...).
While venturing off the path does usually reward you with a few of Darksider's loot chests, which are definitely more than worth the effort of finding, there's no a whole lot hiding out there to discover that's not related to a side - quest or the story itself.
I'm all in favor of these kinds of efforts because they educate the public about the dire need to deal with climate change, but to get to where we need to be will require a whole lot more.
And I second what Glenn Landers (# 10) wrote: «I'm all in favor of these kinds of efforts because they educate the public about the dire need to deal with climate change, but to get to where we need to be will require a whole lot more
For my part I think we need a lot more careful research across the whole panoply of possible techniques; and carefully targeted policy and funding effort to develop and deploy selected CDR techniques in a timely fashion, alongside governance frameworks that minimize the effects of moral hazard.
Choice 1: How much money do we want to spend today on reducing carbon dioxide emission without having a reasonable idea of: a) how much climate will change under business as usual, b) what the impacts of those changes will be, c) the cost of those impacts, d) how much it will cost to significantly change the future, e) whether that cost will exceed the benefits of reducing climate change, f) whether we can trust the scientists charged with developing answers to these questions, who have abandoned the ethic of telling the truth, the whole truth and nothing but, with all the doubts, caveats, ifs, ands and buts; and who instead seek lots of publicity by telling scary stories, making simplified dramatic statements and making little mention of their doubts, g) whether other countries will negate our efforts, h) the meaning of the word hubris, when we think we are wise enough to predict what society will need a half - century or more in the future?
Also, though it's not directly relevant to the issue of the most productive approach in terms of our own long term interests (which I think if people really understood this problem would involve a lot more fealty to moving off of FF now, and the idea of building even more coal plants — which are also responsible for most of the excess that allows bio accumulation of the serious neurological toxin mercury in our food supply, damages watersheds, mountain tops, sometimes whole communities and ecosystems, and, CC aside, is also very polluting — would be more apt to be seen as the idiocy it is), in some sense, no one has a full inherent right to anything really we as a world have built up: It has been a collective effort and you can only drive a Ferrari for instance, because of the hard work of countless others before you and along side you.
It takes design savvy and financial backing to make a project like PlayPump work, but it also takes smart implementation and a whole lot of follow through to make the initial efforts worthwhile and, more importantly, ensure that people have access to water.
Included were more women than men, three teachers and one former - teacher (also a woman of color,) and a whole lot of recognition of the efforts of teachers in general.
This week, Daniel Rubino and Zac Bowden talk Microsoft's Andromeda OS efforts, new Insider builds, the Windows Store being rebranded and a whole lot more.
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