The project was launched by the foundation to innovate new design and incorporate the spirit of the city. |
|
Businesses must continually develop and innovate if they are to continue to be competitive and, ultimately, profitable. |
|
We'll talk about U.S. military efforts to innovate, to modernize, and to stay ahead of any potential enemy. |
|
Some expressed the view that fewer and fewer employers are willing to take risks with ideas or to innovate. |
|
Sometimes it's hard to imagine that there's still room to innovate your product or service. |
|
Were saying that a certain amount of graphical power was necessary to innovate those new gameplay elements. |
|
When you win, it's a great boost for morale, both personally and professionally, and it encourages you to innovate. |
|
Intense domestic rivalry was also found to be important in spurring the industry to innovate and upgrade. |
|
How we have no national dance company and rely on the tender mercies of people like Sonja to keep our folk dances alive and to innovate new ones. |
|
The drive to constantly innovate product and process technology is strongly visible. |
|
If Ireland wants to maintain the gains we have achieved over the past few years, we must innovate more. |
|
There was a century for the taking, but he refused to think about that, constantly looking to innovate and score boundaries. |
|
To innovate, the avant-garde needed to push film out of the black box, the darkened theatre, into the white cube of the gallery space. |
|
I believe it should be influenced by the structure of the organizations that innovate these technologies and products. |
|
The company, he said, intends to innovate by possibly introducing entry-level malts. |
|
Increased competition means producers must innovate and improve constantly. |
|
Leaving no pixel unturned, entrepreneurial genius has found endless ways to innovate on behalf of the eternal quest for more capital. |
|
Our members cannot continue to innovate and invest in the shadow of an illegal peer-to-peer ecosystem. |
|
But brands need to innovate in order to maintain differentiation and increase their audience. |
|
What worries me is that so many large companies appear to be run by people who would rather litigate or grizzle than innovate. |
|
|
That said, if they burn cash too slowly, they risk falling behind in the competition to innovate, expand and gain market share. |
|
Of course, anybody else could read the technical disclosures and innovate based on them, too. |
|
If our economy is to be about more than the diffusion of others inventions, we must ourselves innovate more and invent more. |
|
Public policy encourages surgeons to innovate when confronted with a problem, emergency or elective, for which there is no consensus solution. |
|
To participate fully in today's changing markets farmers must innovate, intensify production, and invest. |
|
The same soldiers and leaders who adapt, learn and innovate on our battlefields serve in our institutional Army. |
|
The rules attempted to define concealed carry yet allow makers freedom to innovate. |
|
Intellectuals do manage to innovate and their innovations are oftentimes not always recombinations of what they have embraced in their education. |
|
It proved a deft way to celebrate a desire to innovate while staying within the bounds of tradition. |
|
Headmasters and school boards have control over budgets, the curriculum, staffing and salaries, and as a result are free to innovate and adapt to local needs. |
|
Johnny's live performances were eagerly awaited and he always tried to innovate with each new show. |
|
There is a great determination to innovate among our market garden producers, famous for their know-how. |
|
A trailblazer in high-speed Internet services, Vidéotron continues to innovate by delivering solutions tailored to customers' specific needs. |
|
To avoid overloading our infrastructure, we are going to have to innovate and find different methods of transporting goods. |
|
Canada must innovate to stay competitive, as our country must vie with emerging countries such as China. |
|
In the absence of better laws, Smith says technology companies will continue to innovate and continue to encrypt data – unless they are stopped. |
|
His refusal to innovate and the harshness of the repression against striking workers antagonize the Labour Party. |
|
As a result, it is very hard to back away from previously-taken decisions, including on the nuclear program, and it is very hard to innovate. |
|
And that was really critical because they really innovated a new technique and so, in order to innovate something obviously you don't want to practice on the first patient. |
|
As the council's report points out, scientists are at liberty to explore, experiment, and innovate largely unburdened by the dead hand of government. |
|
|
It aims at giving the right incentives for all market players to innovate and to invest in new access networks and in new downstream markets. |
|
However, since then an increasingly competitive market and more discerning customers have forced the company to innovate in order to maintain and strengthen its market share. |
|
You have incubated a lot and you have done a lot of brainstorming to innovate. |
|
The key to his success is working in a practice that gives him time to innovate. |
|
It does so because competition for the kind of high-skill workers it needs to innovate is high. |
|
These are cities with a thriving housing market and the intellectual capital to innovate and improve. |
|
In order to innovate in its marketing campaign, the brand wished to offer a photostudio inside a frigorific truck. |
|
Corporations are paying all kinds of non-corporate people goodly sums of money to parachute in and tell them how to innovate. |
|
Any member of the tradition, not least Homer himself, may, moreover, have chosen to archaize on one occasion, to innovate on another. |
|
It might be somewhat sneaky, but perfecting ideas unfinished by more neophyte hobbyists can give an edge to someone trying to innovate. |
|
If you're a self-starter, know how to innovate and enjoy responsibility, Arkema's the place for you. |
|
Agriculture desperately needs young people who can experiment and innovate precisely at a time where the youth are turning away from farming. |
|
Part of the organisation's argument for being left in public hands will rest on its drive to innovate digitally. |
|
Furthermore, tax rates have an impact on incentives to work, save, invest and innovate. |
|
On the other hand, standards can lead to a diminished incentive to innovate in the standardised area. |
|
The Commission is thus missing an opportunity to innovate in the social sector. |
|
Infrastructures do not innovate, neither do electronic networks, although they are a prerequisite. |
|
It is what gives us the ability to innovate, to act rapidly on all fronts, and to react appropriately to changes in the market. |
|
To achieve this goal, the NAR model will innovate in order to remedy the construction hypotheses which render current models totally unsuitable. |
|
Our marketing cluster, like an exchange beehive full of interlocutors is in restless swarm, eager to innovate and take up new challenges. |
|
|
Consequently, Empa is able to offer its industrial partners tailored solutions that boost the companies' ability to innovate. |
|
Change is necessary when the most disastrous of all innovations would be, as it were, not to innovate. |
|
The Mini Challenge asks you to work as a team of two, three or four college or university students to ideate, create, collaborate and innovate. |
|
It is the private sector's role to innovate, take risks and create wealth in a way that benefits our entire society. |
|
It is difficult to innovate when the gestures and attitudes of the revered figures have been codified by habit, or worse by dogmas and rites. |
|
We continue to innovate and enhance the nutritional quality of our foods portfolio. |
|
If necessity is the mother of invention, these nations are in a good position to innovate in discovering and deploying applications that are of value to rural populations. |
|
Companies which innovate not only to reduce their water consumption but also the water footprint of its products will be best placed to face the consumer and regulatory front. |
|
It gives actors more room to manoeuvre, which allows them to innovate without being constrained by the burden of existing rules. |
|
Copyright owners are going uncompensated, mainstream companies can't jump in and innovate for fear of facilitating piracy, and consumers end up confused. |
|
Actually, it took the combination of squad based elements and first person shooting to innovate the war game with last year's award winning Call of Duty. |
|
But they also believe that a company's viability depends on recruiting and retaining people who can work, change, and innovate over the long term. |
|
When people say the U.S. has lost its capacity to innovate, I point them toward the fast-food sector. |
|
First, the ability of U.S. companies to restructure, innovate, find new markets, and grow, at home and globally. |
|
Companies innovate and produce sellable products when management and employees operate in synchrony, Pensak said. |
|
But, generally speaking, businesses scream and moan, react and innovate, and wind up in a better place. |
|
We try to encourage an environment where people come to have fun, innovate and create while doing what they like to do. |
|
The need to institutionalize and innovate participatory structures and processes applies to all countries. |
|
The world is filled with companies that are marvellously innovative from a technical point of view, but completely unable to innovate on a business model. |
|
In a rapidly changing market space, we're always on the look-out for team-orientated high achievers with good communication skills, and the ability to innovate. |
|
|
It is our creative capacity to make difficult, complex decisions and the willingness of the forest industry to innovate and its flexibility to adapt. |
|
From now on we must innovate sites that ally functionality and agreeability, sites which know to keep the ambiance by creating the event in a consistent way. |
|
Far-sightedness and a willingness to innovate with regard to technology, product and market policies allowed Naarmann to gain a share of the German market step by step. |
|
But it would be grotesque to encourage employees to innovate and then, when they do, have a couple of goons rough them up and give them the old heave-ho. |
|
It went on to say that manufacturers were under the gun to innovate and that this measure, basically, would take the manufacturing industry back to where it started. |
|
Entrepreneurs are impelled to innovate as a means to react to an innovative competitor, using their creativity to attempt to outdo the competition. |
|
This boundless passion has led him to relentlessly innovate, transmit and share his exacting requirements with the rest of the Cabasse team, so that all ears can enjoy the essence and thrill of pure sound. |
|
In consequence, there is little opportunity to develop and organize new activities, to extend and innovate the curriculum, or to participate in training. |
|
In order to step off the beaten path and to innovate in cabin design, PSA Peugeot Citroën has introduced an approach that can best be described as cross fertilisation. |
|
It is time to innovate, to get off the beaten path and explore new ways of doing things. The Groupe will enable us to think boldly about the situation in Haiti and to look at it clearly. |
|
Principally, basic economics dictates that when resources are scarce, or when input costs are higher, firms have greater incentive to economize and innovate. |
|
This job requires extensive experience in the Commission services, alongside a capacity to innovate and, above all, a good measure of persuasiveness and perseverance. |
|
A programme's parameters will not limit its future expansion as long as there is a capacity to innovate, systematize the experience and learn from it. |
|
I worry that our Canadian content regulations and our foreign ownership regulations are encouraging companies to twist and contort and lobby, rather than innovate. |
|
From the wine cask to the Hills Hoist, from plastic banknotes to the bionic ear, Australian ingenuity is proudly on display, providing testament to our capacity to invent and innovate. |
|
Finally, we should take steps to provide better protection for intellectual property because this is what can invigorate and foster the incentive for our scientists to innovate. |
|
The founder Callisto Poggipolini, driven by an unflagging spirit to innovate and succeed, manned the few machines that existed in the workshop, situated then as it is today in San Lazzaro di Savena, Bologna. |
|
It was this pride that drove the Europeans of the Renaissance to disobey, to innovate, to transgress religious taboos, that encouraged them to cross geographical as well as cultural boundaries. |
|
What is important, as a follow-on, is learning to learn with technology and learning to use information, to communicate and to innovate with these new possibilities. |
|
Since 1950, the Mustela brand has been continuing to innovate ceaselessly in order to anticipate the specific needs of the fragile skin of newborns, babies and children, as well as mothers-to-be and young mothers. |
|
|
Campy Tech Lab? is imbued with a culture of thinking projected into the future, constant analysis of what can be improved, but above all what we can innovate. |
|
Annex I, Part 5, subtitle 'Approach', paragraph 2 The development of European societies largely depends on their capacity to create, exploit and disseminate knowledge and, from there, to continuously innovate. |
|
We are armed with the wherewithal to invest and innovate so that we may further enhance our strengths and take the necessary steps to address our challenges. |
|
This year Suttons is continuing to innovate with the launch of Redlove®, the first apple with red flesh which is a huge success, with its rootstock sold in major distribution outlets. |
|
We dare to innovate, so actions are bang on and all objectives attainable. |
|
The development in the nanoscience is helping nanoscale products manufacturers to innovate the products with respect to the technology. |
|
In order not to reduce dynamic competition and to maintain the incentive to innovate, the innovator must not be unduly restricted in the exploitation of intellectual property rights that turn out to be valuable. |
|
Otherwise the mentor of innovation would not have the capacity to innovate, which would be an unforgivable mistake when the intention is to build models of efficiency. |
|
ReprintsOne possibility might be that the empirical connection between market share and innovation is spurious: might big firms innovate more simply because they are big, not because they are dominant? |
|
So, let us not disappoint these workers, whose jobs are threatened but who are so proud of their unparalleled technical achievements and are always ready to innovate. |
|
We constantly innovate in order to integrate the latest discoveries into our skin care, and we work in constant collaboration with health professionals. |
|
To innovate and succeed in the knowledge-based economy, Canada must be capable of educating, attracting and retaining a sufficient supply of highly skilled workers. |
|
We continuously innovate to bring to market products that cater to consumers' concerns about a healthy lifestyle, while offering them the opportunity to indulge. |
|
The company's ability to innovate and come up with reliable technology has attracted the leading names in industry fostering the development of new market segments for partners looking for precious metals based innovation. |
|
While respecting company cultures and fostering autonomy, Gimv actively promotes companies' growth, helping them mature, innovate and distinguish themselves from their competitors. |
|
From his attempts upon the civil power, he proceeds to innovate God's worship. |
|
Thomas Csordas, in contrast, analyzes how ritual language can be used to innovate. |
|
All organizations can innovate, including for example hospitals, universities, and local governments. |
|
We need the entire military to be bold, to take the offensive, to innovate, to embrace risk. |
|
As the market leader in high performance and flexible Token Ring connectivity, Madge Networks will continue to innovate with new products. |
|
|
An absence of natural gas for the water heater led her to innovate. |
|
We are securing inventory which guarantee optimal returns, while allowing us to innovate and bring in street furniture, which is evolved and of international standards. |
|
The capacity to innovate and create new business models, solutions and services will enable Singapore to be more competitive in a globalised environment. |
|
We believe Clustrix's blazingly fast and powerful database will enhance our ability to innovate and continuously improve our customers' experience. |
|
Author Edward Macan counters by pointing out that these bands were at least partially motivated by a nostalgic desire to preserve a past style rather than a drive to innovate. |
|
More important, I contend this overfunding is limiting our ability to innovate, which has negative consequences for America's war fighting capabilities. |
|
Organizations can also improve profits and performance by providing work groups opportunities and resources to innovate, in addition to employee's core job tasks. |
|
Daddy's heading home to innovate by learning how to change a poopy diaper. |
|
Innovate E-Commerce gets a bang out of the immediate publicity the awards programs generate. |
|