But I want to take a moment to point at the rhetoric that Zuckerberg uses to argue for this.
"As a search engine, Google's job is to point at things, " says Danny Sullivan, a search analyst and blogger for Search Engine Land.
It is furthermore always helpful to point at all those other countries with their own currencies, some of which are doing well, some of which are clearly not at all.
Behind the bland faade of a nondescript office park, a visitor is using a joystick to point at a crude graphic of a spring rendered on the screen of an ordinary PC.
Tholen told CNN there was about a half-hour between when the asteroid got high enough in the sky for the telescope to point at it and before the sky became too light to observe it.
Emigrating to Sacramento in 1968 at age 16, after riots in Hong Kong threatened his father's business, Lee started high school without a word of English, skipping lunch for the first few weeks until he learned to point at what he wanted.
Immigrating to Sacramento, California in 1968 at age 16, after riots in Hong Kong threatened his father's business, Lee started high school without a word of English, skipping lunch for the first few weeks until he learned to point at what he wanted.
The medium is still too new to be able to point at a reliable set of results, we have no way of knowing how the advertising works over a worthwhile period of time, so any successes or failures that we have so far are purely anecdotal.
"The aircraft had to be able to land and take off in 125 meters, it also had to have a very low noise output and the aircraft needed to be able to accelerate rapidly up to 350 mph in order to get point to point at low level very quickly, " said Avcen managing director Mike Dacre.
And astronomers are just as likely to point a software query-tool at a digital sky survey as to point a telescope at the stars.
At present, the most up to date point at which the current conflict might be addressed in the curriculum would be likely to be the Arab-Israeli conflict and subsequent peace process in the 1960s and 1970s.
Most of these are related to the point at which the meteor becomes bright enough to cast a noticeable shadow in the videos.
Only ten years later, by the early 1990s, the exponential gains had evolved to the point at which microprocessors were running fast enough in PCs and workstations to topple an entire industry--in this case, all the minicomputer companies along Boston's fabled Route 128.
Instead, they are all too likely to let the system drift closer to the point at which the money runs out, then enact a series of emergency proposals -- and trust to luck.
June treasury note futures nevertheless reversed gains to a session high point at 122-25 to trade at a minor loss on the day trimming a fall in the yield to a minor rise to 3.18%.
They ran to television cameras to point fingers at President Obama, saying these delays were preventable.
Presumably, KBRA hopes to grow to a point at which it rates hundreds or thousands of deals.
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There is no reason to point any fingers at this point in time.
ASEAN's other leaders are in no position to point fingers at Dr Mahathir.
When I was booking our accommodations six months ago, I relied heavily on TripAdvisor to point us at good choices.
It begins in a small way and builds up to the point at which people can be totally preoccupied with it.
Jenkins converted to cut the deficit to a point at half time.
And yes, I know I am too, before you jump in to point avidly at the plank you've spotted in my own eye.
Over time, pressures within the fundamentals can build to the point at which they overpower all of the investor sentiment and force a price correction.
That gets distracting, and far too many speakers unconsciously use the clicker or pen to actually point at the audience, which can look very menacing.
Mulligan pointed the resultant free but perhaps crucially, Brian Roper swung over a great long-range effort to cut Tyrone's lead to a point at the break.
BBC: Brendan Devenney tries to break clear from Ryan McMenamin
When invasive species move around from one state to another, forcing governments to spend money cleaning up the problem, folks like to point fingers at one another.
National governments are another: politicians have mastered the possibilities of European integration to the point at which they, and not the commission, have become the real agenda-setters.
The success of the past generation is a reminder of how Celtic became the first British club to win the competition, a fact which supporters are quick to point out at every opportunity.
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