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Word: renderings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Anyone who thinks electronic data storage is going to render print obsolete in the near future should consider Grove's Dictionary of Art, a 5-ft.-long shelf of 34 dark green-bound bricks of scholarship with a 720,000-item index, just published at the rebarbative price of $8,800 and worth every penny. This is, of course, the sister publication to the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, which, almost since its publication in 1878, has reigned unchallengeably as the authoritative work in its field. After the relentless barrage of propaganda about information that has been growing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: TOWERING VENTURE | 11/4/1996 | See Source »

...extension, their career. This book is about finding rational ways to survive what Grove calls the "10x"--tenfold--factors that can threaten to change everything about a business in an instant. Just as the car turned horse buggies into curiosities, new technology like the Internet, Grove predicts, will render obsolete hundreds of businesses that are thriving today. The lessons Grove has learned in building Intel into a giant resonate beyond the inside of a PC. "People who try and fight the wave of a new technology lose in spite of their best efforts," he writes. "They waste valuable time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: SURVIVING IN DIGITAL TIMES | 10/21/1996 | See Source »

Cities and novelists seem to have a special, symbiotic relationship. No other literary form can render a city as richly as the novel can, and probably no other setting--sprawling, crisscrossed with relationships, randomly cruel and beautiful--better suits the novel's strengths. Certainly, masterpieces have been written about smaller communities, but the correspondence between city and novelist is unique, and so it is that we refer to Dickens' London, Balzac's Paris, Joyce's Dublin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: TALES OF THREE CITIES | 10/7/1996 | See Source »

Despite his shake-up, Johnson oversees a solid operation filled with top portfolio managers. And even as new stars such as Robert Stansky, who took over Magellan, hunker down to chase the Dow, Johnson is orchestrating a three-tiered expansion plan that he hopes will render the vicissitudes of the stock market less meaningful. Part of it involves boosting Fidelity's subsidiary businesses, which range from newspapers (Fidelity owns 117 of them) to limousines and software...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NED JOHNSON AND FIDELITY: THE MONEY MACHINE | 9/30/1996 | See Source »

...last question, I have concluded, is important enough to render all the others somewhat trivial--and it's a question those at Harvard don't ask nearly enough...

Author: By Valerie J. Macmillan, | Title: Asking A New Question | 9/26/1996 | See Source »

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