Sentences with phrase «write a think week»

I'm planning to write a Think Week paper on this to submit to BillG and depending on how my content creation goes over the next few days, I may post it here.
On January 22nd I wrote a Think Week paper and submitted to Bill Gates with Blue Monster on the cover and a central theme.
Just before Christmas I wrote a Think Week Paper that I submitted to Bill Gates - yeah, him - and in this video I talk about why the Blue Monster was the catalyst for that and why it's on the front cover of the paper.

Not exact matches

Rascoff: Five or six or seven of us were just literally in that conference room for weeks discussing, debating, thinking, talking, writing on whiteboards, trying to decide whether to do something in real estate or something else.
«My MIL wrote her son a letter a week before we got married telling him to think very carefully about what he was doing, as he needed to be sure he was marrying someone he loved and trusted... She later walked out of our wedding in tears, drove home (seven hours away!)
I thought I'd continue my article from last week by clarifying another point of confusion when it comes to writing a business or marketing plan.
As I wrote last week, I think one answer is they don't believe in the truth.
It is either testament to a great writing job by Werth, or the very real and harrowing nature of Vertex's journey that when Wysenki announces the price for Incivek, $ 49,200 for a twelve - week course of the drug, that the reader thinks for a moment, is that all?
So if you think you didn't write your blog post this week because you were busy look again.
Last week I wrote a post summarizing some of my thoughts on a Smart Money piece called «The 400 % Man» that came out about a year ago.
Earlier this week, we wrote to you to share our thoughts on the correct way to think about «corrections» as market volatility, strangely absent last year, has come roaring back.
Countless articles and thought pieces have been written on this topic over the years, including an excellent one by Justin Baer and Ryan Tracy that appeared last week in the Wall Street Journal.
When I sat down last week to write out my goals for the year, the most audacious goals I could think of weren't career accomplishments...
Think about how much more meaningful it is to share that a blog post generated 10,000 page views, 50 inbound links, 20 new leads — two of which are poised to close this week — than to say, «Rachel wrote a really cool blog post last month.
I wrote only one post in the past two weeks, but I think it's important: Bitcoin Here are some short takes and some weekend reading: F...
Dylan Grice from Societe Generale in London wrote on value for an OTB a few weeks ago, and he follows that up with more thoughts on the use of macro trends versus value investing.
At one time, we were writing two blog posts per week, which at the time, we thought was more than enough.
Some people think it affects gold because it moves potential gold buyers into another alternative, but as I wrote last week, hell has frozen over when I find myself in agreement with Alan Greenspan.
In a prior time (THINK 1960s), we had a different hedge group writing: IT»S GOOD NEWS WEEK by the HEDGEHOPPERS.
Now, I'm considering capping passive income by diversifying into zero coupon munis b / c now that I think of it, I'm not so sure I'll still by writing 3X a week or still have FS 10 - 13 years from now.
That's the kind of thinking that annoyed a Missouri seminary professor so much that he wrote a blistering open letter in the online magazine Religion Dispatches last week attacking its rationale.
I have spent the last several weeks thinking about what I would write if I could write only one post.
Well, come to think of it, I unknowingly did say something about it a few weeks back when I wrote a far too long post on Joe Pug's contemporary folk song I Do my Father's Drugs.
I will write some posts later this week about how this can happen, but for now, think about the freedom and flexibility you would enjoy in pastoral ministry if you did not have to worry about a paycheck from the church.
Not at all, but here I am looking for a job to pay off the financial debt I made thinking I am sort of called, to eventually f (o) und family, and going starting tomorrow on a full - time two week course on how to write job applications, so me explaining the sinfullness of suicide, and regarding many persons on this planet me motivating them to endure whatever crappy situation (often for profit and / or gain of someone else) even tho they would be better off leaving such situation / s if possible (kind of Moses), seems rather pointless.
(You think I'm kidding...) And I feel like I could write for about two weeks on all of the wisdom and kisses - from - heaven I received while reading it.
I had a conversation last week about this sort of thing with Chuck McKnight, and now you are writing a post about it, and it seems that everywhere I turn people are having similar ideas and thoughts.
«The power of God,» writes Charles West, «the reconciling work of Christ, operates not in a church which meets on Sunday morning and perhaps once or twice during the week, not on the edge of the world, but in the middle of daily life, and thought
I've really enjoyed hearing your thoughts on writing this week!
I think just writing things out at the beginning of the week makes things go so much more smoothly!
So while I'm busy experimenting a variety of blood orange recipes over the next week I thought I'd write about the drink that always welcomes their arrival in our house.
I wrote the original draft of this post, a fluttery collection of thoughts about chocolate and Summer baking and these glorious blackberry chocolate cupcakes, shortly before we flew down to Santa Barbara last week, and a few days before the horrific violence in Orlando during the early hours of Sunday morning.
As a rather late tribute to Coeliac Awareness Week (9th - 15th May 2016), I thought I'd write about a lesser known symptom of coeliac disease.
After looking over the Week 22 slate I decided to write up a quick preview because I think there's a couple value plays out there.
what happened big gun, i thought arsene was your messiah, weren't you the same person that called us all fickle for wanting his head, in fact you wrote an article about it a week ago, smh, watch us scrape a win off galatasaray and u'll be back to your wenger worshiping ways
Wasn't even aware that DC and Stipe were coaching, I don't think it was mentioned in any article written about them for the past several weeks.
JUST IN: For all those who thought I was wrong and writing wrong stuff, the Lemar deal was agreed at # 55 but Monaco pulled out of the deal.They now want # 65 for Lemar.This should tell you that Resource and I were correct.The Lemar deal was done but Monaco pulled out of the deal.If you don't believe me just wait two or three weeks later when the media reveal this.
The string of interesting Thursday Night Football matchups (something I never thought I'd write) continues in Week 7, with the Kansas City Chiefs traveling to Oakland to take on the Raiders.
«When you think about what Leicester have achieved and what they have achieved this week against Spurs, I don't think you can write them off either.
Although, as a side point, I do think it highlights that we are not consistent enough to grab one of the automatic promotion spots as I wrote about a couple of weeks ago.
When I wrote mine at the beginning of last week, I thought once or twice this is the sort of post RA should write, or we should write together.
The writing had been on the wall, though, before Arsenal's run of bad results, a run that was slightly arrested by a straightforward 3 - 0 win against Dinamo Zagreb, and watching Arsenal over the past few weeks, it is hard not to think that after Mesut Özil, the most important member of Arsenal's midfield is not the now - absent Francis Coquelin but Aaron Ramsey, who enabled the unconventional midfield pairing of Cazorla and Coquelin to win matches without Arsenal being entirely convincing or dominant.
That was one of the topics discussed at a workshop in Vancouver, B.C., on love put on by Carrie Jenkins, a philosophy professor at the University of British Columbia, that featured many wonderful speakers besides Jenkins, whose thought - provoking book, What Love Is And What It Could Be, comes out in a few weeks, including Marina Adshade, UBC professor of economics, author of of Dollars and Sex: How Economics Influences Sex and entertaining TEDx speaker; and Mandy Len Catron, who teaches writing at UBC and whose Modern Love essay on how to make anyone fall in love with you was one of the most - read Modern Loves, and that lead her to write a book on love essays that comes out in 2017.
It's hard to write this after over 10 years of mailing DVDs with pride, but we think it is necessary: In a few weeks, we will rename our DVD by mail service to «Qwikster».
I thought I would write a few blog posts for this up coming holiday season, of activities that you can do with your preschool through elementary age child (ren) rather you are a parent, babysitter, or grandparent stuck with the kids for the next two to three weeks.
-LSB-...] honour of World Doula Week I thought I'd share a blog written by Wonderwear Modern Diaper Service (guest -LSB-...]
More so because I think I've spent more time reading blogs this week than writing my own (I had a lot of autoposting going on).
I kept thinking he would outgrow them, but at 18 weeks he was still taking short naps so I decided to write to you for help.
It is as if you have written every thought that has plagued my mind for the past few months, ill feel great and confident about it for days, even weeks at a time and then one night she'll wake me up several times throughout the night to nurse and cries everytime I try to unlatch.
As I was writing this week's posts on bento (here and here), I was thinking, I'm sure the TLT readership is going to find this stuff too frivolous, as compared to meaty school food reform issues I often cover.
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