Edward Tenner is author of Our Own Devices: How Technology Remakes Humanity and Why Things Bite Back: Technology and the Revenge of Unintended Consequences (both Vintage).
In his intriguing book, Why Things Bite Back, author Edward Tenner shows how the use of technology to make life better often has unexpected and ugly consequences.
If the drama bug has bitten your company, bite back.
FORBES: Combat Cattiness: 4 Tips To Downplay Drama And Foster Productivity
The thought is that the Ospreys and Wales skipper is also foremost among possible reservists should injuries bite in the back-row.
The hosts, full of graft and bite, hit back immediately when Phil Neville lashed a low drive into Blues keeper Petr Cech's arms before Cahill and Marouane Fellaini had headed attempts on goal.
"I think we (are) setting a new precedent that will come back to bite us, " Graham told reporters.
The investment bankers were too piggy with valuations, and it may end of coming back to bite them.
Insurance companies, however, may find that the issue comes back to bite them.
If, however, Mr Howard has got it right, one can expect this issue to come back to bite Mr Blair.
But for a Texas homeowner, an impromptu anti-snake solution -- set that repulsive reptile on fire -- came back to bite.
The question is whether it comes back to bite DMG and what this says about its ability to finesse high-profile deals.
That's the list of fears, lurking on the sidelines, which could come back and bite us, but no-one wants publicly to confront.
So nationwide, these low down payment sales, like the subprime of old, are already coming back to bite the hand that fed them.
Just be sure not to sacrifice liquidity and control for a percentage point or two, as it may come back to bite you.
In 2009-2011, during profitable times, semiconductor makers over-spent on capital equipment, and this has come back to bite them in the form of production overcapacity.
The one thing we can't do at this club is get carried away and think we're world-beaters or it will come back to bite us.
The image of that veneer would quickly come back to bite.
FORBES: The Education Of Oprah Winfrey: How She Saved Her South African School
"I'm always aware if you start relaxing and think things are going well, this game has a way of coming back to bite you, " he said.
In short, a technical shortcut that the biggest banks developed in order to simplify their outsized paperwork problems has come back to bite everybody on the ass.
Yet the division might come back to bite the administration.
"Fewer women are getting mammography and that's why fewer women are getting diagnosed with breast cancer, so eventually that will come back and bite us in the rear end, " Weiss said.
CNN: Cancer death rate dropped nearly 20 percent in 15 years
"The 'bring it on, the more information the better' attitude we have about genetic testing could really come back to bite us, " says Ellen Matloff, director of cancer genetic counseling at the Yale Cancer Center.
We get no added benefit from it, and ultimately, in the long run it would just come back to bite us by way of a now pissed off, underpaid employee, hearsay in the market, or worse, turnover.
As brave as this supposed employee may be, it may come back to bite him, but his Spartacus moment is turning into a rallying cry for the victims of one of the biggest launch disasters in modern gaming history.
FORBES: EA Employee Chastises Company Over SimCity in Public Letter
If the fiscally conservative Republican from Wesley Chapel, Florida is thinking of running for another public office after being Speaker of the House, his recent decision to halt the Sun Life Stadium upgrade legislation may come back to bite him.
FORBES: Miami Dolphins Stuck Without Stadium Renovations Despite Support In Tallahassee
"You don't want one person to bear an inordinate part of the more stressful household tasks, because that's going to come back and bite you, " says Rosalind Barnett, executive director of the Communities, Families and Work Program at Brandeis University.
应用推荐