These simple words said with conviction gather the mind into a point of power.
In nineteen eighty-one, Iraq was on the point of acquiring nuclear power. 10.17.01 Narrator The Osirak reactor was an experimental plutonium plant.
However, there is certainly a use case for the PadFone Infinity, and we are long past the point of the graphical power or screen resolution of the phone part being a problem when plugged into its tablet battle suit.
The origins of Power Point were solidly grounded in good intentions.
"It's quite incredible that we're at this point when the power of the phone is crossing over that with baseline processing power of basic laptops, " Mr Shuttleworth told the BBC.
And rather than preside from the dining room table, he will lead his family to the den, where they will follow the Seder on a widescreen TV, using Apple's equivalent of Power Point.
The report does point to the benefits of nuclear power, including competitive pricing, strong base-load power provision, and low-carbon emissions.
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The point is that the power of music in such a project lies in making a person wish for something positive for another person, as opposed to wishing them ill.
And we have the Power Point Triangle of Death, where the speaker moves to the screen to point out some illegible word, drifts back to his computer, while mumbling something about the next slide, only to come to the third point of the triangle floating somewhere uneasily in between his screen position and his computer position.
Instead of fighting it out to be the master of the game console, they arranged themselves so that one controlled the console, one oversaw the Portal of Power, and the third stood back to jump up and down and shout directions from his vantage point, occasionally dashing over to the Portal of Power to switch characters.
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Most of all, they spoke of the simple power of expectation: making it a conscious point to look for greatness in black kids in whom people had not thought to look for it before.
Most Italians point instead to the overweening power of the baroni (barons), or tenured professors with the power of academic life and death.
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Mr Thompson said being able to build up to 12 nm offshore made it "more acceptable" from a visual point of view and made more wind power available.
The heat wave that roasted much of the country for more than a week left scores dead and millions without power at one point -- many of them following a round of severe storms that swept the Mid-Atlantic states on June 29.
That is roughly 0.3% of the power of the 180-decibel cut-off point that the operational system would have.
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How would you feel if you were a CEO of a large corporation and could not send your power point slides in preparation for an urgent meeting, because a bunch of teenagers were on an mission to download all Sci-Fi movies released this year ?
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"Inconsistency, " said defenseman Michael Del Zotto, who plays the point on one of the team's power-play units.
Which brings me to the real point of this story, some high-power name-dropping.
Point Source Power, a project out of Lawrence Berkeley National Labs, has created a dung-powered fuel cell for emerging markets.
So the probabilities of hitting a point structure like a power plant with a tornado drop precipitously compared to a hurricane, and the design basis for power plants varies accordingly.
The focal point of the controversy is the 1987 Constitution, drawn up after the People Power revolution ousted the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos the previous year.
The tragic hero, having gained great power, would get greedy (koros), grow over-confident to the point of overwhelming arrogance bordering on moral blindness (hubris), go mad with power (ate), and then get brought low (nemesis).
In different ways, each of these examples appears to point to the same, welcome conclusion: that the imbalance in corporate power of the late 1990s, when many bosses were allowed to behave like absolute monarchs, has been corrected.
But there comes a point when the market will run out of shrugging power.
Opponents point to the enormous cost of building a nuclear power plant and question whether the industry is economically viable without taxpayers footing much of the bill.
Thus, Power Point, in the hands of most business speakers, commits the fatal sin of at once making the speaker and his talk irrelevant to the audience.
More to the point, it is possible that some of this power might be released before a fault moves catastrophically, and thus provide some warning of an earthquake.
Before Fukushima, a "nuclear renaissance" -- as it was termed in the press -- seemed well underway, except for this point: Nuclear power, as a total of world energy supply, has been in steady decline for the past decade.
Of course at this point, most of the people who most want to see The Weather Channel are without power.
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