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Detailing the number of tweets, calls on Skype, music-streamers on Pandora, and other activities on the web, the folks at GO-Globe.com packaged a mountain of information in digestible rainbow-colored spokes extending from a classic stop-watch image, underscoring that all of this happens in just 60 seconds.
FORBES: How Much Information Zips Around the Web in 60 Seconds?
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The actress and fashion designer announced a philanthropic campaign Monday called Watch Hunger Stop that includes raising money through the sale of a version of Kors' best-selling Runway watch.
WSJ: Halle Berry, Michael Kors launch Watch Hunger Stop
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They would stop a block from his father's house and watch him walk home.
WSJ: Seeking the Father, Finding the Architect
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With Remote, it is possible to watch a video on an Android phone, stop it midway through, and transfer the video, stopped at that point, to a Google TV box.
FORBES: YouTube: Encode Taste
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We are hopeful that DirecTV will work with us toward a resolution, and stop denying its subscribers access to the networks they watch most.
ENGADGET: Viacom channels disappear from DirecTV after the two companies can't reach a deal
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Be sure and stop by the stable yards to watch the craftspeople demonstrate life on a plantation, and take the tour of the House Museum.
BBC: Daily deal: Verdant gardens steeped in lowcountry history
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We had big-screen televisions set up in a number of towns for people on their way to work or about their business just to stop and watch the races.
NPR: Jamaicans Revel In 100M Olympic Triumphs
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Small children sometimes stop to talk to the crew and watch them work, especially if the hopper blade is making a lot of grinding and crunching noises while it pulverizes something big, like a stove or a couch.
WSJ: Life Among the 'Garbage Faeries' : Inside the Sanitation Department
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We watch Satellite as, true to his name, he brings television (and therefore news of war) to a clamoring community, and, far worse, we watch the teen-age Agrin (Avaz Latif) try, with awful persistence, to put a stop to her own suffering and to that of her illegitimate child.
NEWYORKER: Turtles Can Fly