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(Ultramoisturizing body wrap, anyone?) "We've added more demanding options in the last three years," said Amy McDonald, director of the spa and program development at Miraval, "partially because more men were coming to the spa, and they wanted to climb walls, walk across wires, jump off a telephone pole and do physically intensive things.
And if you're doing intensive things like video editing, wouldn't you still opt for the Mac Pro? Yes, the starting prices for an iMac are relatively cheap (starting at $1,299 for the 21.5-inch version and $1,799 for the 27-inch version), but the starting prices for MacBook Pros are still cheaper (starting at $1,199 for a 13-inch non-retina and $1,699 for a 13-inch retina).
And for you as a doctor… these are very intensive things… but I do think there is a certain clarity.' GPs explain that it is often more difficult to predict how other chronic, ultimately terminal conditions will progress compared with cancer.
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"This is a more intensive thing we're talking about.
From donating their open source WYSIWYG toolbar to the world (a resource intensive thing to build from scratch) to offering free hosted wikis to important projects like Mary Hodder's Speakers Wiki (a list of tech speakers, many women, for conference organizers to refer to) SocialText has a history of authentic actions exemplifying the "give more/get more" ethic.
Pain really never, it's sort of a labor intensive thing treating pain, so it takes time" (Physician 10).
It's common to think of technology as encompassing only very new, science-intensive things—ones with electronic or digital bits, for instance.
Labor-intensive things like police protection, mail delivery, sanitation, legal and funeral services will also continue to stay within our reach, he says.
Rather, it is the less computer-intensive things such as toiling in wet laboratories, performing clinical trials and navigating the regulatory-approval process where one finds the bulk of the cost of bringing a drug to market.
All of a sudden, at least for data-intensive things, you get this 100X improvement in one generation.
With the world's fastest computers capable of processing quadrillions of calculations per second and the amount of data researchers generate growing by an order of magnitude each year, every field of science is turning to supercomputers to do new, innovative, data-intensive things: analyze genomes, simulate the evolution of dark matter, visualize the structure of proteins, and on and on.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com