Word: client
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...took only three months to write the source code, Fanning says he didn't have time to make it more complicated. He had to learn Windows programming in addition to Unix server code, which he had taught himself. It is exceedingly rare for one programmer to excel at client and server applications, but Fanning had no choice. "I had to focus on functionality, to keep it real simple," he says in his gravelly monotone. "With a few more months, I might have added a lot of stuff that would have screwed it up. But in the end, I just wanted...
...techniques that combine bits of all these with "nuggets of wisdom" from arenas as diverse as football and 12-step programs. Sometimes what a coach does, says Kathleen Phillips, an in-house coach at Cap Gemini Ernst & Young, the former management-consulting arm of Ernst & Young, is help a client see a problem--or a problem job--a different way. In that way, say proponents, coaching helps shore up weak points in their employees as well as build on their strengths...
...never let it be said that Milosevic is not a fair man. Clinton, Blair and all of their co-accused each had their own court-appointed lawyer, who took their work very seriously. "I tried to contact my client," Tony Blair's attorney earnestly told TIME, explaining that he'd written the British prime minister a letter but had received no response. Still, he managed a dash of optimism earlier in the week about actually meeting his client and the rest of the accused, suggesting "Maybe they'll show...
...already losing out on business to bigger rivals, and CEO Sandy Warner had warned employees - who own 30 percent of the stock - that the bank could face a takeover if revenues did not pick up. The merger is designed to solve that problem by combining Chase's huge client base with Morgan's investment expertise. "This is a story about growth," says Warner. "It's really that simple...
...listing Clinton's name first in the suit sure does garner attention. On Wednesday, McCulloch's lawyers - experienced anti-discrimination litigators Lynn Bernabei and Debra Katz - justified the presidential prominence by arguing that the Clinton White House didn't do anything to protect their client from the machinations of the chief cake decorator, and worse, failed to implement federal legislation requiring that procedures be set up so that White House employees could file grievances in just such cases...