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"Given the limitations of how much information you can convey, it's usually just a way to augment something you see on television and read in print," said Sam Craig, a professor of marketing and international business at the Leonard N. Stern School of Business at New York University.But Professor Craig says it can be a useful tool for advertisers.
"Given the limitations of how much information you can convey, it's usually just a way to augment something you see on television and read in print," said Sam Craig, a professor of marketing and international business at the Leonard N. Stern School of Business at New York University.
Rather, it is about the outpouring of love and support the individuals engaged in this scene offer one another through these performative settings, and the chance to create and augment something collectively -- simply because they all feel and have the drive to produce culture, build community and recognize the radical potential invested in this Queer New World.
His art is timing, augmented by something as intuitive as the way a carrier pigeon homes in on its destination.
They like pasta, and you will find dishes of ravioli or penne augmented by something Corsican like minced charcuterie.
The official job numbers are based on a monthly survey of employers, augmented by something called the "birth-death model," which factors in jobs assumed to have been created by employers who are too new to have been included in the survey, and subtracts jobs from employers assumed to have failed and therefore not responded to the latest survey.
And it's a big part of the success of Augmented Reality, something we'll see a lot more of in coming months as AR apps arrive.
Media companies are realizing that, and TV ads, while not on their way out, are going to have to be heavily augmented with something else.
Consensus among mental health professionals will have to suffice until we can augment it with something better.
This increased sharpness is the work of a Finnish startup called Varjo (pronounced like "Vario"; it means "shadow" in Finnish), which is trying to massively improve the resolution of images for both virtual-reality and augmented-reality headsets—something that may be a way to woo more users to the nascent technologies and make them more useful for professionals.
Maybe that life-size looks a little too literal, so I slowly augment things; perhaps something looks too natural, or it's too elegant.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com