Word: macros
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...than risk the potential frustration of figuring out a new application, both companies and individuals continue to shell out for a bunch of familiar programs that, frankly, most of us barely scratch the surface of. (When was the last time, for example, you inserted a formula or recorded a macro in Word...
...consciousness has imbued Harvard’s plans for the Allston campus. But the better known aspects of its plan—notably, the deal between Harvard and Massachusetts to put a pre-emptive cap on carbon dioxide emissions from the new campus—have focused more on macro environmental policies. The newest revisions focus less on these innovations, which rely heavily on out-of-sight technology, and more on creating a natural aesthetic that interweaves natural elements more tightly with the future campus. In order to accomplish this aim, the plan focuses on improving interconnectivity throughout Allston while...
...Americans' hearts and minds. As the war drags on but recedes from the headlines, the political satires of the early years (like Embedded and the British screed The Madness of George Dubya) have been supplanted by more rueful--one might say resigned--plays, which shift the focus from macro to micro: the men and women who are actually doing the fighting...
...menu to address the multiple areas of troubles threatening the banking system," thus staving off what he says would have been a "global depression." Still, he says the contagion and mutation of the crisis from one financial activity to others makes it impossible to know what to expect in macro terms in the medium run. Indeed, Paul Tsang, senior vice president at Polaris Securities in Hong Kong, says he expects the rebound to continue as investors wait to see how the proposed bailout plans affect financial institutions, but that longer-term predictions remain murky. "My initial hunch is consolidation will...
...short answer many European economists give is that it ought to. There are few reasons, they say, why markets shouldn't return to a situation somewhere closer to normal - though they add there was little in macro-terms to justify their bearish frenzy last week. But following Sunday evening's agreement by the 15 leaders of euro-zone countries to accept collective rules to underwrite loans between banks and inject new capital into those facing serious trouble, hope is now rising that the situation in Europe may stabilize. Indeed, euro-group leaders used the most encouraging language they could muster...