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In the age of the ever ubiquitous World Wide Web it is hard to shock people, but when a 26-year-old guy in a small town starts buying stuff worth a couple of lakhs without touching the products or without asking the salesman 101 questions, it is time to ask oneself what Marvin Gaye, the singer, asked: "What's going on?".
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She thought I was unfair to her in a March column, when I noted she had accepted a $500 donation in 2012 — for her reelection campaign as a Del Norte County supervisor — from the domestic partner of ever-ubiquitous development consultant Susan McCabe.
So consumer reviews became ever more ubiquitous — and influential.
Shakespeare, as ever, was ubiquitous, with two productions each of "The Tempest," "The Comedy of Errors," "Richard III" and "Much Ado About Nothing" on hand to remind us of the ceaseless elasticity of the Bard.
The world is also on the cusp of a wearable revolution which will fix Google Glasses to people's skulls and put smart T-shirts onto their torsos: the irresistible, all-knowing machines will be ever more ubiquitous.
In this context the poster became ever more ubiquitous, and, peculiarly, after 2011, it began to be used in what few protests remained, in an only mildly subverted form.
This football-mad city with enough pigskin-abandonment issues to keep numerous therapists busy is now fully behind the Ravens heading into the Super Bowl against the San Francisco 49ers, to be played Feb. 3. Purple lights illuminate building facades downtown, team flags flap on storefronts and from car windows, and Joe Flacco and Ray Rice jerseys are ever more ubiquitous.
As broadband internet and mobile phones become ever more ubiquitous, as electronic substitution grows and as demand increases for flexible deliveries and differential pricing, the justification for maintaining the universal service obligation and the monopoly that accompanies it will diminish, and it will come to be seen as an expensive anachronism.
Patterson believes that smartphones — becoming ever more ubiquitous — are a great democratizing force.
If this country ever gets ubiquitous broadband into the home, cyberporn will no doubt help finance it.
Carrier-level blocking actually breaks net neutrality in the U.S., so it's unlikely to ever be ubiquitous.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com