Word: puree
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...occupy about 25,000 bed-nights a year, spending an average of 3177 a day. "They come because they want to experience Denmark," says Steen Berg, head of the Aarhus tourist board. "They enjoy walking around the old streets, watching the cyclists, visiting the cathedral and museums. It is pure pleasure having them...
...contrast to Adams' pure black-and-white vision of untouched nature, William Eggleston's pictures throw a colorful light on the incidentals of human life in the American South. When he goes to a desert, as he did in 2000, he doesn't lift up his eyes to the hills but takes in a grave, a rusty sign, a passing freight train, an abandoned suitcase lying open on the ground. And instead of composing his images formally he seems to snap at random, cutting off people's heads or tilting the horizon. Sometimes he doesn't even look through...
...with people who brought along planning proposals from our competitors, and they'd plugged in 18% yearly returns," says Bach. "For a while it was possible to back-test a hypothetical portfolio of 10 stock funds for 10 years and see those kinds of returns. So it wasn't pure fiction. But we ran our assumptions at 10% or 12%, and we never got the client." In the postbubble market, Bach says, he plugs in 6% returns and prays that he's being conservative enough...
...throughout AOL," Logan says. "But I think the structure has been holding them back a little bit." And for all the disdain the techies at AOL might be expected to have for him, some will be surprised to learn that he began his career as one of them. A pure-math major at Auburn, he worked his way through school as a computer programmer for NASA. He's not a Luddite, but he is a business fundamentalist. He listens well, is very decisive, has a proven eye for talent and holds managers accountable. That's how he has delivered...
...take, send, and receive color digital photos. Holiday snaps don't sound especially revolutionary, but to hear the networkers talk, multimedia messaging is just about the biggest thing since rechargeable batteries. mmO2 chief executive Peter Erskine even tempts fate by invoking that dreadful New Economy buzzword, killer app. Pure hype? Maybe not. Wireless operators are looking hopefully to Japan, where Vodafone's subsidiary J-Phone already has more than 40% of its subscribers using camera phones. And this wasn't the result of any giveaway subsidies on the handsets. "We made them among the most expensive phones in Japan," says...