Who knows, if we all set up a web cam we will actually be able to sit down in our respective homes and have a face-to-face conversation. |
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Unlike the phone, or a face-to-face conversation, you don't need to answer right away on the internet. |
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As a society, we are becoming less adept at talking face-to-face and conversational skills are suffering. |
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Now, he hoped, technology could help people meet each other and build real face-to-face ties with people. |
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The groups consisted of three people, some operating face-to-face, some operating online. |
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In the office, emails and instant messaging are sending face-to-face meetings into extinction. |
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It is amazing how a quick face-to-face meeting or conversation can lead to great things down the road. |
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He has already spent the equivalent of six years travelling and his adventures have brought him face-to-face with many challenges. |
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Although smallpox can be spread by air currents, close face-to-face contact is far more effective. |
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The site then sets up face-to-face meetings for those individuals to get together. |
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Denise stared miserably at the screen, wishing it could be a face-to-face conversation. |
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Frankly, I'm pretty much as honest in face-to-face conversations, but not always. |
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I'm just as neurotic in written conversations as I am in face-to-face ones. |
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Their face-to-face meeting during their weeks together developed into love. |
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The two have a little face-to-face, before the referee coolly calms the situation. |
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The on-screen conversations soon led to face-to-face meetings and social events. |
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However, second generation migrants are brought face-to-face with the hypocrisies in any society. |
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I only wish I could sit down with each person, face-to-face, and do these questions. |
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It was no ordinary bus tour, but one that would bring him face-to-face with fans who had won a contest to be there with him. |
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Council employees are being asked to pick up the telephone instead, or even engage in face-to-face conversations. |
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I'd far rather go down in a face-to-face challenge, not after some insidious little campaign of back-biting. |
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Already we've reduced the amount of face-to-face contact in most institutions. |
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The drum major, in his tall black fur hat, face-to-face with Reagan, smartly saluted his departing commander in chief. |
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Finally, she meets her secret friend face-to-face, accepts the book and thanks him for all he has done for David. |
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Standing face-to-face with an expert karateka like Ushiro Sensei was an enlightening and humbling experience. |
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Previous attempts have failed as I have always come face-to-face with salesmen who don't appear to speak a word of English. |
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But unlike face-to-face hemming and hawing, the Facebook rejection is polite but direct. |
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When you were face-to-face with Mr. Davis when he was standing up, could you describe what his face looked like? |
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It has made her anxious, even if much of the face-to-face attention has been positive. |
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Of course, in the South, face-to-face interactions are almost always pleasant, even if people gossip behind your back. |
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If he can't meet members of the JTTF face-to-face, he talks to them on a secure telephone that scrambles his conversations. |
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Where you expect to find your true inner self, you will come face-to-face with a mob of strangers. |
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The central and overriding focus of this project is dealing with racism face-to-face. |
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It bemuses me that I need a face-to-face situation in order to be able to construct my own argument without feeling overwhelmed. |
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Then, his head bouncing up and down, he trash-talked face-to-face with Dawkins before chucking the ball deep into the stands. |
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They will meet face-to-face before the third and final cricket Test to discuss how best to prevent a boilover between players. |
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And, within hours of the first setback of his Ibrox management, they are thrown face-to-face with a Celtic side which smells blood. |
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People are in continual engagement in socioculturally framed face-to-face activities as they participate in and live their everyday lives. |
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His nihilistic view of human existence was the very starting point in his lifelong struggle to confront the universe face-to-face. |
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If you're lucky, you might get the chance once in your career to sit down and have a face-to-face chat with a true, 24-carat sporting legend. |
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I have very little face-to-face contact with the team at the office as I send my articles in via email. |
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Between then and May 22 there were three face-to-face meetings between them and each time they were videoed and audio recorded. |
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Having experienced unspoilt forest and encountered proboscis monkeys, I found myself face-to-face with a green wall of spikey fronged oil palms. |
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The burly men with biceps will be competing in the grand final in a series of face-to-face bouts. |
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The non-verbal cues given during a face-to-face meeting will not come across in an electronic survey. |
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The only birds occasionally known to mate face-to-face, stitchbirds, were down to one isolated population. |
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Here, I stood face-to-face with magnificent structures in 17 architectural styles, including Gothic, renaissance and classical. |
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Respondents overwhelmingly preferred face-to-face interaction with the professor followed by email contact. |
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The shift to an increasingly mobile workforce means that many managers supervise employees they rarely see face-to-face. |
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Instead, they all insisted that course newsgroups should be used only as a supplement to face-to-face discussion. |
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A face-to-face meeting with the pathologist may clarify some misunderstandings. |
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With no time for face-to-face friendships she relies on e-mail. |
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In this age of Internet, families still prefer face-to-face interaction. |
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While the series was conceived as a way to bring Americans face-to-face with the reality of death, it did lose something of its impact as the show wore on. |
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Over and over again, Peter came face-to-face with his impetuous, rash nature, and every time he had to confront his inability to change. |
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In our new mobile condition we minimise social encounters with strangers on the street and avoid face-to-face contact. |
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This face-to-face relationship between consociates need not be especially intimate. |
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The consultants conducted face-to-face interviews with children and organised focus groups. |
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Why not take our Evening Press campaign to a five-star General face-to-face? |
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Without the visual cues we get in face-to-face conversation, flame wars could erupt. |
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The natural desire is to limit the need to go face-to-face with one's enemy and hence to avoid the enemy's counterblows. |
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She swung it open forcefully, finding herself face-to-face with a beaming Michael. |
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The couple existed day-to-day until the court case in November, when they had to come face-to-face with the victims' families for the first time. |
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They believe face-to-face contact is what encourages bright ideas at work, but desk-bound staff no longer talk the way they used to. |
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Over several e-mails, phone calls and an extended face-to-face meeting, I learned about David. |
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While science fiction routinely describes face-to-face encounters with intelligent aliens, it may be that we will never actually meet extraterrestrials. |
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In face-to-face interviews, trained caseworkers are often used, and in most interviews the race and ethnicity of the interviewer and respondent were matched. |
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Making face-to-face contact with customers, distributors, and the press is one of the most powerful yet most neglected marketing tools in the region. |
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In correspondence and face-to-face talks with three executives, the five were told the company could not make the same level of savings by axing jobs in France and Germany. |
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Scher set up a face-to-face meeting with John Edwards on September 18 at the regency Hotel in New York City. |
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Imagine every communication with a co-worker had to take place face-to-face. |
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A pre-established admission criteria should be used to identify patients who need a face-to-face interview versus those who can be interviewed by telephone. |
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A shot of her lying in bed next to Amber face-to-face as she prays to God to guide them to improve themselves is heartbreaking. |
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In an unprecedented move, Clifford went to Chicago to have a face-to-face with Tony's superiors. |
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If things go right and you decide to meet your virtual lover, here are some tips on how to maintain your safety when arranging face-to-face meetings. |
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Because so many of us are so used to communicating in ways other than face-to-face, ghosting might be a comfortable solution to an otherwise awkward situation. |
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This had the additional benefit of keeping communities to a size that allowed face-to-face communication and intimate personal contacts between all members. |
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He devises a far-fetched plan to poison the monk through the mail, because he realizes that he cannot kill the man face-to-face. |
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They had a very hierarchical structure but operated with extremely slow communications, such as notes carried by messengers and face-to-face meetings. |
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Surfing to Survive Coming face-to-face with an overzealous tiger shark, this surfer brawls with his unexpected attacker. |
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Facedown in the water, a jolt of fear shot through me the first time I came face-to-face with a chinook, which aimed straight at me before veering sharply away. |
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He challenged the president to weekly, face-to-face debates, you betcha. |
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A flame war and a face-to-face argument are two very different things. |
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Walker came face-to-face with the business end of a sawn-off shotgun. |
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One of the rare African America hedge fund managers, Bill Thomason says he likes to assess company management face-to-face before committing a cent of his money. |
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Having come face-to-face with the king of political interviews on his other show, University Challenge, she has nothing but praise for the hard taskmaster. |
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But people can also come face-to-face with African hunting dogs and a giraffe. |
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As a young boy, coming face-to-face with Le Grice, who had just set Lomax's buildings on fire, Papps loses sphincteral control and soils himself. |
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She offers face-to-face, phone, post or email consultations in a range of therapies, including magnotherapy, Reiki and aromatherapy. |
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The two stumpers were set to come face-to-face in Durham's LV County Championship match with Sussex at Hove, which started today. |
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Hamilton and Rytina, for example, had 391 respondents in the Boston SMSA match hypothetical crimes with punishments in face-to-face interviews. |
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One November, I came face-to-face with a barred owl in a swampy, wooded area. |
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The data generated from this study indicated that there was no significant difference between the face-to-face section and the on-line section. |
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The supervision component involves traditional, recurrent contact where an agent meets face-to-face with the parolee on a regular basis. |
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Exploring the potential of rehearsal via automatized structured tasks versus face-to-face pair work to facilitate pragmatic and oral development. |
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Availability of technologies has made traditional teaching methods including textbooks, face-to-face and deductive teaching outdated. |
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Patients were randomly allocated to either a telegenetic or face-to-face conventional clinic. |
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Hole cards are private on each player's handset, allowing players to bluff each other face-to-face. |
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It was not like Friedman didn't try to have a face-to-face with Lazar. |
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Interviews were conducted face-to-face with the interviewee selecting the location. |
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But Revenue Commissioner Pat Galvin told me she was well known for BlackBerrying during face-to-face meetings. |
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The Taksim Square and Gezi Park Turkish protesters were due to have their much-anticipated face-to-face meeting with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoAan on Wednesday. |
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This puts an end to the time consuming and expensive process of printing boxfuls of documents to assess and traveling to numerous face-to-face witness prep sessions. |
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Results are based on face-to-face interviews conducted during March 2006 with a randomly selected sample of 1,000 Kyrgyzstani residents, aged 15 and older. |
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The senior intelligence office later conferred to me in a face-to-face meeting on May 9 that my name was on a hit list together with other persons. |
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This contrasts with a manual method that lodges paper documents at the land title registry following a face-to-face settlement and exchange of documents and bank cheques. |
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Any faculty member could require the clickers for any face-to-face class. |
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This paper examines the use of face-to-face interviews and self-response questionnaires as methods for studying issues of gender bias in the legal profession. |
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Far from using the 'naughty potential' of webcams, almost nine out of ten respondents used their webcam for harmless, face-to-face catch-ups with friends and family. |
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And the Royals got more than they bargained for when they came face-to-face with an enormous 1,500kg Charolais bull called Attaboy owned by Gareth Roberts, of Llangadfan. |
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