Word: accessibly
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...though, in a 2003 academic paper that Anderson says influenced his theory, three management professors looked at the 80/20 rule in reverse. They upended the belief that the Internet's main benefit to consumers would be lower prices. Instead, they suggested that greater value online came from consumers having access to a wider selection of products and services. The key for businesses hoping to capitalize on the long tail, says Carnegie Mellon's Michael D. Smith, one of the paper's authors, is to cater to "significant heterogeneity in taste." Even though a majority of us may like...
...competition. That's the graveyard slot here. By the 11th day, many of the Cannes conventioneers have departed, and the Jury presumably has a good idea of their award preferences by then. For a last-day film to win the Palme d'Or would be like a public access show at two in the morning copping the top spot in the Nielsen ratings...
...that only those who wanted to learn the subject matter would take it,” Lukin wrote in the e-mail to the Crimson. “The academic honesty was assumed.” “It’s fair in that everyone technically had access to the exam, but [Lukin] has to somehow remedy the system,” Shope said. In an e-mail response written under condition of anonymity, one of the students, who was part of the study group that completed the problems on the 2004 final exam, wrote that working...
...class and I assumed that only those who wanted to learn the subject matter would take it,” Lukin wrote to The Crimson. “The academic honesty was assumed.” “It’s fair in that everyone technically had access to the exam, but [Lukin] has to somehow remedy the system,” Shope said. One of the students who was part of the study group that completed the problems on the 2004 final exam wrote in an e-mail that working on old exams...
...wine and eating cheese. There is a semi-secret Sorrento Square social organization that used to occasionally publish a so-called humor magazine for the few who can fit in the cookie-cutter shape of the publication’s officer core. But for the majority of Harvardians without access to these institutions, a new forum has provided an unexpected space to unleash their suppressed desires: Lamont Library. With the advent of the library’s 24-hour schedule, Lamont has become—especially during the doldrums of reading and exam periods—a place of revelry...