Is the trade-off ... Yeah, it's a good trade-off. Right.
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We obviously think it's an important trade-off and it's the right trade-off to make.
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As Facebook knows well, every choice involves a trade-off, and every trade-off involves a cost.
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In other words, every choice involves a trade-off, and every trade-off means some value has been spurned.
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"There is always a temporary trade-off between inflation and unemployment; there is no permanent trade-off," he summarized.
|
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"If we need to trade off margins, we will ... I imagined this trade-off would have been even higher, but we are managing to keep our profitability," he told investors.
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They see that trade off when you talk to them.
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We would trade off holding the Portapak and the microphone.
|
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It's an understandable trade-off — random shutdowns are arguably more frustrating than just generally slow performance — though Apple appears to have been less than transparent with its customers about what that trade-off was.
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That's about the nature of the trade-off made by XNOR.ai.
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Certainly and dramatically, but the trade-off potentially provides many benefits.
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That might be a more than exceptional trade-off for you.
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Giving up skateboarding wasn't easy, but Roberts understood the trade-off.
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But to me that's a reasonable sort of a trade-off.
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Because there's where the trade-off starts to fall in play.
|
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In response, Congress passed a law with a tough trade-off.
|
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But year by year, the trade-off is becoming more dramatic.
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Ultimately, one must wonder about the equitability of this trade-off.
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Having done the trade-off, they kiss, sealing their newfound intimacy.
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|
But we don't want to make a trade-off in safety.
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Supply shocks also create a nasty trade-off for monetary policy.
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Little wonder, then, that many people choose a different trade-off.
|
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I'm not sure even Johnny Depp would make that trade-off.
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|
Mossberg: It seems like a fair trade-off, I don't know.
|
|
Battery designers make a trade-off between energy density and lifetime.
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Usually we trade off paying, and today is my turn ($219).
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The trade-off for this is you see lots of ads.
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We try to make that trade-off as simple as possible.
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A similar trade-off applies when determining what products to allow.
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The quality of life trade off would simply be too great.
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|
That is a high price to pay for a trade-off.
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The trade-off is you won't have the latest Google software.
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The VW affair drew back the veil on this trade-off.
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|
The trade-off there is you lose resolution for improved exposure.
|
|
But when framed more broadly, the trade-off is pretty clear.
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|
But it is a "difficult trade-off," according to the BIS.
|
|
And there's no agreement on how to trade off among them.
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|
That's not an economic trade-off that you want to do.
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For the right seller, that trade-off might be worth it.
|
|
They were not describing a trade-off between justice and order.
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|
It was just too tempting a trade-off to pass up.
|
|
This trade-off, though, may not be quite what it seems.
|
|
The trade-off did not sit well with some union leaders.
|
|
From the solver's perspective this seemed like a worthwhile trade-off.
|
|
The Reacher novels set in the past involve a trade-off.
|
|
It was always a trade-off between function and looking good.
|
|
And you're not wrong to ponder the trade-off you see.
|
|
Every formula has some potentially repugnant element or tricky trade-off.
|
|
I think there's a reasonable trade-off in limiting the targeting.
|
|
Before it's time to trade off solos, the couple shakes hands.
|
|
"I think it's the trade-off that Apple makes," he said.
|
|
But with many of these chemicals, there's a health trade-off.
|
|
The trade-off is different than for someone experiencing more pain.
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|
POLICY TRADE-OFF The MPC's Remit recognises that when the effects of shocks persist over an extended period, the MPC is likely to face an exceptional trade-off between returning inflation to target promptly and stabilising output.
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|
Then you're not saying to them, trade off between these two things.
|
|
It was a painful trade-off which also hurt the Saudi economy.
|
|
That suggests a sharp trade-off between crime reduction and civil rights.
|
|
So this might be a trade-off they are willing to make.
|
|
Large indexes like the trade off a multiple of forward earnings expectations.
|
|
Kavesh said the commission fee is a business trade off with Amazon.
|
|
With the 360-camera, the Mod form factor is a trade-off.
|
|
Security is paramount, so the trade-off is between scaling and decentralization.
|
|
Mr Mattis tried to assure them that no such trade-off exists.
|
|
For now, that trade-off doesn't appear to be good for business.
|
|
TRADE-OFF If growth hinges on booming trade, alarm bells are sounding.
|
|
There is always an inherent trade-off between security and user experience.
|
|
As they gained credibility, the trade-off between inflation and unemployment weakened.
|
|
But Apple benefitting financially is what makes this particular trade-off whiff.
|
|
Ride-hailing apps present a classic version of a policy trade-off.
|
|
It seems a reasonable trade-off to survive the post-truth world.
|
|
In a properly socialist system, this is a very explicit trade off.
|
|
This highlights the trade-off in the current publication system as well.
|
|
There's a trade-off between free speech and having a safe community.
|
|
But here's the trade-off: EIS cannot be enabled in HDR video.
|
|
We trade off shopping for the week, and it's T.'s turn.
|
|
Not everyone, including apparently Cox, has made peace with that trade-off.
|
|
However, some workers Reuters spoke to said they accepted the trade-off.
|
|
It's a trade-off, but at least you have those faves forever.
|
|
In every domain, we make a trade-off between risks and costs.
|
|
Messrs Gans and Leigh: Sometimes there is an equity-efficiency trade-off.
|
|
And there was no bitterness in her voice about the trade-off.
|
|
It was a trade-off Yahoo's leadership was often unwilling to make.
|
|
Cook said there is a "trade-off" between public safety and privacy.
|
|
A good example of a common trade-off is privacy versus anonymity.
|
|
"There needs to be some kind of trade-off," Mr. Bishop said.
|
|
This age of the version release carries with it a trade-off.
|
|
There is a trade-off to adopting the serverless, service-full philosophy.
|
|
Solid-electrolyte batteries promise to enhance performance without the safety trade-off.
|
|
Is that the trade-off you're telling me that we're making here?
|
|
And in exchange for that, you're willing to trade off some information.
|
|
It's up to you to determine what an acceptable trade-off is.
|
|
That might be a trade-off the NeverTrumpers are willing to make.
|
|
Second, what restrictionist policies are an appropriate "trade-off" for those protections?
|
|
So the trade-off is not whether to track children or not.
|
|
"Yes, there is a trade-off between investigating and legislating," Wright said.
|
|
But keep in mind that the Adelphi's location is a trade-off.
|
|
What I have to always remind myself is there's a trade-off.
|
|
Is there a trade-off Democrats or liberals might accept for it?
|
|
In the process, we are creating a big trade-off in efficiency.
|
|
Stock futures clawed back to trade off their lows following these reports.
|
|
So the question becomes what kind of trade-off is more palatable.
|
|
"There is a robust trade-off here," said one person briefed said.
|
|
The trade-off for skaters, between rink and pond ice, is obvious.
|
|
What is the situation where you've had to face this trade-off?
|
|
They may even trade off survival for a greater quality of life.
|
|
CEO connected Mr. Chesson to Trade Off Construction Services, a nonunion firm.
|
|
CEO connected Mr. Chesson to Trade Off Construction Services, a nonunion firm.
|
|
The trade-off is that to some degree, you know what's coming.
|
|
"It is certainly a fair trade-off in my book," he said.
|
|
With such a large field, the DNC faced a clear trade-off.
|
|
On top of that trade off, the GH5S features Panasonic's dual-native ISO.
|
|
And there is a consensus that that shouldn't require an enforcement trade-off.
|
|
It's an ideological trade-off that we must wrestle with as a society.
|
|
The projections, released in November of last year, also acknowledged the trade-off.
|
|
This may seem like a bizarre trade off — "leisure" activities for "productive" ones.
|
|
But choosing between them involves a trade-off and a gamble (see Briefing).
|
|
No one is trying to make a trade off between safety and security.
|
|
Each firm has to make a trade-off between the costs and benefits.
|
|
In another trade-off, governments rely on close co-operation with technology companies.
|
|
There is a kind of trade-off to be made, the documentary suggests.
|
|
Three gunmen roll up on the trade off between his guys and Domingo's.
|
|
"There is always a temporary trade-off between inflation and unemployment," Friedman said.
|
|
When officials talk about the Phillips curve, they mean Friedman's temporary trade-off.
|
|
So the shape any eventual trade-off will take is currently anybody's guess.
|
|
It may be that there is a trade-off between those two goals.
|
|
This has been the trade-off that has been pending for 25 years.
|
|
We get together about once a week and usually trade off the bill.
|
|
The ecological trade-off in this complex dynamic is yet to be understood.
|
|
We trade off paying, so I buy the groceries at Reyna's and Lotus.
|
|
Inevitably, accelerating the path to market for pharma firms involves a trade-off.
|
|
However, to be fair to marketing, you are making an implicit trade-off.
|
|
"The trade-off between revenue growth and margin expansion is important," he said.
|
|
We could see this trade-off of order and openness that cultures have.
|
|
That would be an intentional design trade-off that dramatically undermines security guarantees.
|
|
That time trade-off directly undercuts the administration's ability to solve real issues.
|
|
"But there's that trade-off that happens with data and anxiety," he said.
|
|
Of course, the trade-off between consumers and big tech isn't always fair.
|
|
It's not really laziness as much as it is a considered trade-off.
|
|
And many of them, like the velvet choker, come with a trade off.
|
|
This is identical to the punk‑versus‑disco trade‑off of the 1970s.
|
|
Whatever the reason, the result is a trade-off between speed and endurance.
|
|
After Microsoft's misadventures in the smartphone market, it is a necessary trade-off.
|
|
AND A TERRITORIAL SYSTEM SO I WOULD SAY THE TRADE-OFF IS GOOD.
|
|
For a slightly bulkier phone, I think the trade-off is worth it.
|
|
And the trade-off, in terms of portability and versatility, its worth it.
|
|
The trade-off for taking advantage of the situation is a concrete win.
|
|
The trade-off is high out of pocket costs when they need care.
|
|
Everything here was a trade-off between traditional safety considerations and operational necessity.
|
|
But to security experts like Mr. Lee, the trade-off could be worse.
|
|
And if so, was the trade-off between happiness and success worth it?
|
|
"On NPLs there is a trade off between speed and value," he said.
|
|
It's a values trade-off that the nurses on my floor instinctively understood.
|
|
So be sure that the price you're getting is worth the trade-off.
|
|
There is a constant trade-off to balance user empowerment and user ease.
|
|
And if that's the trade-off for a bigger battery, I'll take it.
|
|
Conserving RNA editing sites may have come with an evolutionary trade-off, however.
|
|
And Americans are wary of the fundamental trade-off we're making for technology.
|
|
"There's always that trade-off between encryption and ease of use," Heid said.
|
|
"If we need to trade off margins, we will... I imagined this trade off would have been even higher, but we are managing to keep our profitability," CEO Frederico Trajano said in a meeting with investors and analysts in Sao Paulo.
|
|
Every time it faced a design trade-off, Google chose the more pragmatic option.
|
|
Whether or not the privacy trade-off is worth it is up to you.
|
|
MB: Do you think there is a trade-off between privacy and effective AI?
|
|
Even here, though, Oculus has added a trade-off that's making some fans mad.
|
|
The trade off is I agree to check email every night until 8 p.m.
|
|
To fix this, Facebook's engineers created the isInputPending API, which eliminates this trade-off.
|
|
AMP (and Facebook's Instant Articles platform) has always been a trade-off for publishers.
|
|
The most obvious trade-off for this constant quick resume feature is battery life.
|
|
The trade-off is you just have to submit to some ecosystem lock-in.
|
|
The trade-off is that despite the name, the Slim Folio Pro is bulky.
|
|
But as a trade-off, Dice can hit the ball at much sharper angles.
|
|
The trade-off in savings versus complexity of manufacturing and distribution just isn't worthwhile.
|
|
Yet nominating a candidate just to assuage this group comes with a trade-off.
|
|
This trade-off is often represented through a relationship known as the Phillips curve.
|
|
Biometric-based algorithms always involve a trade-off between precision and ease of use.
|
|
The problem was that there was a direct trade-off between these two goals.
|
|
But girl, there is a trade-off when your BlackBerry has a great keyboard.
|
|
History, however, suggests that there is not necessarily a trade-off between these goals.
|
|
By supporting investment, this action should improve the monetary policy trade-off with inflation.
|
|
It sounds like this is about which trade-off we're most willing to make.
|
|
For the typical client, that is a poor trade-off between risk and reward.
|
|
I don't think there's a trade-off between a business over any reasonable timeframe.
|
|
Is better security, privacy, and quality a fair trade-off for fewer customization options?
|
|
In the consumer's mind now, all forms of entertainment trade off against each other.
|
|
"I actually think most people are making a rational trade-off decision," Kinsella said.
|
|
It's also a good idea to remind clients about the risk-reward trade-off.
|
|
"What we favor is ending the trade off between flexibility and security," he said.
|
|
But often the trade-off is unevenness in how long data takes to access.
|
|
It's a trade-off of ease of use and utility over freedom and creativity.
|
|
It wasn't the most significant gamble, but there was also an obvious trade off.
|
|
Mrs May's thinking on this trade-off is unknown, but there are ominous signs.
|
|
The millions on the streets do not accept the patience that trade-off demands.
|
|
Many people who use retail clinics might be willing to make that trade-off.
|
|
By and large, Americans of the past were unwilling to make that trade-off.
|
|
The trade-off is that they have to be surrounded by corpses all day.
|
|
But there's a trade-off: with a lower number, we have a bigger cohort.
|
|
That was an acceptable trade-off when weapons of war were muskets and cannons.
|
|
There's a trade-off between convenience and privacy with which most people are comfortable.
|
|
There is no trade-off in campaigning between primary states and November swing states.
|
|
With portability often comes a trade-off — less performance for a higher price tag.
|
|
"Whatever you think about that trade-off depends on your values," Mr. Vigdor said.
|
|
But whether a similar trade-off occurred with our muscles has remained in doubt.
|
|
I have two incredible teenage girls who trade off debating with me every night.
|
|
But "creative" is often a red flag, a signpost marking an insidious trade-off.
|
|
Here's how some economists assess the trade-off between economic well-being and health.
|
|
And genetics is a trade-off, so we can't choose to optimize every trait.
|
|
"I may be willing trade off some of the other investment benefits for that."
|
|
South Koreans have broadly accepted the loss of privacy as a necessary trade-off.
|
|
But economists are arguing there is no trade-off that has to be made.
|
|
Even then, he can't endure the trade-off, becoming cruel and finally unintelligible instead.
|
|
"It's a trade-off — there's a risk and reward on both ends," he said.
|
|
There is a trade-off for all that cleverness, though, beyond it costing more.
|
|
Dahn's group was responsible for the seemingly impossible task of overcoming this trade-off.
|
|
For liberals in an age of Trump, that might be a fair trade-off.
|
|
The trade off was that it wouldn't return nearly what a stock fund might.
|
|
"There's a trade-off between commuting and the cost of real estate," said Ortegren.
|
|
Given such a trade-off, it seems like screening would be a good idea.
|
|
Each presents a trade-off between grip and durability that figures in racing strategies.
|
|
The trade-off being slower growth than the stock market but tax-free gains.
|
|
Such is the trade-off for driving the most advanced car in the world.
|
|
Oftentimes, you&aposre faced with a trade-off no matter what job you choose.
|
|
In the growth-inflation trade-off, the RBI has clearly leaned toward the latter.
|
|
For example, how will the U.S. trade off between fighting the Taliban and ISIS?
|
|
The impasse over border wall funding was solved this time with a trade-off.
|
|
For Trump, a self-described great dealmaker, that trade-off is apparently worth it.
|
|
In my old apartment, there was a constant trade-off between temperature and ventilation.
|
|
The trade-off for the rapid response is usually higher costs and carbon emissions.
|
|
Tax policy often faces the challenge of a trade-off between equity and efficiency.
|
|
But, in the trade-off between efficiency and safeguards, Kiwis have preferred the former.
|
|
In New York, almost every living situation involves a trade-off of some kind.
|
|
The trade-off, of course, is that none of our friends witnessed our ceremony.
|
|
"There is a trade-off between financial returns and social impact," the report concludes.
|
|
It turns out that there isn't an absolute trade-off between growth and fairness.
|
|
We found there is a definite trade-off between sugar content and fruit size.
|
|
This goes against the popular idea that there's an inherent trade-off in intelligence.
|
|
But a trade-off arises if inflation keeps rising, even from a low base.
|
|
" CARNEY ON TRADE OFF BETWEEN SLACK IN THE ECONOMY AND INFLATION "The orientation of the committee has evolved because what had been a trade off between slack in the economy and inflation above target has diminished quite substantially and actually goes away.
|
|
Whether or not that goal happens, I know the trade off will be worth it.
|
|
MPs must decide whether the government is right that the public accepts this trade-off.
|
|
The Chinese currency fetched 6.6318 per dollar in onshore trade, off Tuesday's low of 6.7204.
|
|
Privacy. But that's an easy trade-off, say the mostly young people who live there.
|
|
Maybe a couple of months of living like it's 1899 is a fair trade off?
|
|
The Chinese currency fetched 6.6177 per dollar in onshore trade, off Tuesday's low of 6.7204.
|
|
It's an interesting trade-off that the new technology has caused to happen in comedy.
|
|
So, the trade-off isn't really ads for apps — it's intrusive mobile surveillance for apps.
|
|
If so, that would make the trade-off between inflation and unemployment harder to manage.
|
|
John Harwood: So there's an efficiency-equity trade off, and you're willing to make it?
|
|
I like today's trade-off though, because going to Costco on Sundays stresses me out.
|
|
Spending time learning it will trade off with learning other, more versatile computer programming languages.
|
|
The only way to get around this trade-off is with a bigger government subsidy.
|
|
It was a dull session with nothing to trade off of and Cramer was bored.
|
|
It was a dull session with nothing to trade off of and Cramer was bored.
|
|
This is a crucial trade-off that Mrs May's government has been reluctant to acknowledge.
|
|
But it is the trade-off between unemployment and inflation that most preoccupies central bankers.
|
|
The other problem I had with the NES30 Pro is more of a trade-off.
|
|
The Chinese currency fetched 6.6444 per dollar in onshore trade, off Tuesday's low of 6.7204.
|
|
Such a trade-off between generosity and work incentives is inherent in negative income taxes.
|
|
The progressives insisted there was no trade-off between doing what's right and getting elected.
|
|
For the networks, which trade off broadcasting the Emmys, the situation is more than academic.
|
|
Of course, the trade-off with a phone with such a massive battery is thickness.
|
|
There was a trade-off between equality and maximizing income, a version of economic efficiency.
|
|
Set aside the previous paragraph; there's an even easier way to illustrate this trade-off.
|
|
Then there is that trade-off with an advertising-driven model versus a subscription model.
|
|
Me, my friend, and his daughter trade off on Grand Prix courses and Balloon Battles.
|
|
Therefore, the administration should avoid any such trade-off, even if all other alternatives fail.
|
|
Wishing that we did not face this trade-off will not make it go away.
|
|
But the trade-off was more space, a yard and keeping our neighbor community together.
|
|
Even so, he predicts that humans will accept the trade-off between inscrutability and efficiency.
|
|
Later when they jail me, that will be different, but it's an interesting trade-off.
|
|
It's a real challenge and this ends up being a trade-off in social goods.
|
|
That's the fundamental trade-off, and where you come down turns on what you value.
|
|
At an early stage of an epidemic, targeted testing leads to an uneasy trade-off.
|
|
Motherhood is subjectively one of the most positive, glowing things you can trade off of.
|
|
Many strategists consider it a long-term trade-off that will outlast the Trump era.
|
|
It's a fair trade-off for the stability and the lift capacity this desk has.
|
|
As a trade-off, I did have to take two extra days off of work.
|
|
Here's the trade-off: when the phone is open, it feels bad under your fingers.
|
|
"You may trade off some athletic ability to get to that end stage," Debiparshad said.
|
|
During the summer, they trade off raising the kids and overseeing operations on the ice.
|
|
The horse, then, is how the software is designed to deal with that trade-off.
|
|
"It's a trade-off when it comes to getting publicity for Greek wines," he said.
|
|
Earlier gains in Apple and Amazon helped the tech-heavy index trade off its lows.
|
|
But none of us have infinite bank accounts, so there is always a trade-off.
|
|
He didn't like the trade-off, even though it meant more power for his state.
|
|
But madness is the trade-off, which becomes an allegory for where Germany is headed.
|
|
But some fans worry about the trade-off of homers versus action in the field.
|
|
It's a crappy trade off, but evidently one that most of us seem OK with.
|
|
And when people are confronted with this trade-off, they invariably choose capability over usability.
|
|
And that directly impacts the community where they worked," he added, saying, "And that's the trade-off that, whether it's a natural disaster or the coronavirus or anything else, that's part of the trade-off that we look at as we offer options going forward.
|
|
We calibrated the package appropriately, in the judgement of the MPC, to balance the trade-off.
|
|
The trade-off is you may not get some convenient features that the paid model offers.
|
|
In this modern age, it seems like almost all technological advances have a privacy trade-off.
|
|
Traditionally, phone manufacturers position a sensor directly behind a lens, but there's often a trade-off.
|
|
They're super expensive, but if we each buy one, we can trade off every other day.
|
|
We trade off hosting dinners with each other, and usually whoever is hosting provides the food.
|
|
" "Participants are looking for things to trade off of and we're through the earnings season basically.
|
|
"It's not really right to frame it as a trade-off for public spending," she said.
|
|
Yes, there is a trade-off between absolute security (is there such a thing?) and convenience.
|
|
And there's a lot of trade-offs and they're not always easy things to trade off.
|
|
The trade-off is that you lose fine detail for the sake of lower image noise.
|
|
Still, the trade-off in price and power consumption may well be worth it for you.
|
|
It's a trade-off that those of us in the audience have to accept as well.
|
|
Another is the financial profile of the business and the trade-off between growth and profitability.
|
|
IT HAS long been assumed that economic policymakers face a trade-off between unemployment and inflation.
|
|
The trade-off here is that the case is slightly heavier than most wireless earbud cases.
|
|
The divers' trade-off is that their hard and dangerous work can be spectacularly well paid.
|
|
DOING business in Saudi Arabia has long involved accepting a trade-off between stability and sclerosis.
|
|
"But without them, there is nothing to trade off of, no earnings, no pronouncements," Cramer said.
|
|
The trade-off, then, was that the drivers had to switch cars halfway through each race.
|
|
He sees no trade-off between scale and security, at least not in the foreseeable future.
|
|
It's a trade-off, and sooner or later one of the two is going to win.
|
|
For Burkina Faso's cotton growers, GM ended up as a trade-off between quantity and quality.
|
|
The obvious trade-off that we're making is that we share the risk with the landlord.
|
|
I think that some people are able to, despite that trade-off, make very compelling experiences.
|
|
Shares of Schlumberger were trading at $66.86 in afternoon trade, off a fraction of a percent.
|
|
"I think deeply about it, and you can't get away from the trade-off," says Hinton.
|
|
The trade-off is the chain doesn't have direct control over the employees making the deliveries.
|
|
But is constantly charging them and pairing them with your other devices worth the trade-off?
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The trade-off might not include funding for Trump's proposed wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
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The zombie firms highlight a "difficult trade-off" for central bank policy, the BIS writers concluded.
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But there is no question that the family adventure will make relocation a good trade-off.
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Extending the credits was a trade-off for lifting the federal ban on crude oil exports.
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The trade-off is that the C.P.S. asks more in-depth questions regarding income and poverty.
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But the cloud business model tends to be more stable — a trade-off for slimmer margins.
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The trade-off, of course, is that it may help Hillary Clinton win socially moderate voters.
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IG Metall acknowledges there may have to be a trade-off with the headline pay rise.
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For me, that made the trade-off of paying more for housing a little more manageable.
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"Americans want simplicity but there's a trade-off; it will cost some people money," he said.
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There's a bit of a trade-off when you compare it to the Apple Watch, however.
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But even then it's unlikely that the full trade-off has been made clear to you.
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A central bank like the Fed faces a basic trade-off between economic growth and inflation.
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We kind of trade off with each other, me and the rest of the leadership team.
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This trade-off between the present and the future shapes every country's decisions about climate policy.
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But they could not reach agreement, and now the infrastructure-tax trade-off could be moot.
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"They can never achieve the finely balanced trade-off we have achieved," Mr. Parry-Jones said.
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The approach — a novel one using data from prenatal blood tests — came with a trade-off.
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Well, people are willing to trade off very sensitive information if they get value from it.
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"That's not to say you won't experience the competence and likability trade-off," Ms. Ely said.
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Do we just have to make a hellish trade-off between medical health and economic health?
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And if the upside is speed or information, my next question is: What's the trade-off?
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But the cheaper premiums would come with a big trade-off: higher out-of-pocket costs.
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But these cheaper premiums would have come with a trade-off: higher out-of-pocket costs.
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She gave up her bed so the two couples could trade off sleeping in her room.
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In the beginning, it felt like the trach all over again: freedom with a trade-off.
|
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Investors are now recalculating the risk-reward trade-off as the risk of a recession looms.
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"I think it's a trade-off," said Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex.
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It is well known that there is a trade-off between throwing fast and throwing accurately.
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This trade-off became untenable during the Great Depression, when governments reneged on their monetary commitments.
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The designer bag paired with lunch from Subway could be a conscious trade-off, Straub said.
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But even under perfect conditions it would be a trade-off that not everyone would choose.
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Apple makes a trade-off when it chooses to keep the decryption key for iCloud backups.
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But the trade-off is that there's a big ol' seam between the Duo's two screens.
|
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Tariffs China and the US are escalating their tariff trade-off, and the situation isn't pretty.
|
|
He added that the trade-off would be the revenue challenges created for the federal government.
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Before you sign up for that membership, make sure you're ready to make the trade-off.
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"It was a trade off," said one Republican official familiar with the final call with Trump.
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|
This trade-off of cognition and emotion suggests a few principles to better manage your multitasking.
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This trade-off of cognition and emotion suggests a few principles to better manage your multitasking.
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|
But the trade-off was painful: getting her education meant not returning home for six years.
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This is the fundamental trade-off opioids present, with which we have been battling for decades.
|
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This was the peak in a show that included a thrilling trade-off with Bruno Mars.
|
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The vocals trade off between Carlotta Cosials's intentional absurdity and Ana García Perrote's straight(ish) delivery.
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|
The Obama administration made this change because it felt like this was a good trade-off.
|
|
So there's always going to be a trade-off in how much we tell participants upfront.
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What I would say is, you got to think about what your trade-off is there.
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I missed the prehistoric monster but welcomed the trade-off of brute force for giant optimism.
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But a lot of the work that we do is way more cross-functional than saying that it's just dedicated… NT: So I want to get into one other big trade-off, which is very related to this, which is the trade-off between privacy and safety.
|
|
The thermodynamics of information copying dictates that there must be a trade-off between precision and energy.
|
|
Given the choice, Manning may well have taken that trade-off for the Booker or the Whitbread.
|
|
The trade-off we've accepted, perhaps unwittingly, in favor of our relative corruption-proof government is polarization.
|
|
But if mellowness remains Mayer's weakness, the brilliance of his best compositions provides a worthy trade-off.
|
|
If you're trying to cut costs, living with a 128GB drive is not the worst trade-off.
|
|
But the row highlighted a trade-off: saving for tomorrow's children makes it harder to help today's.
|
|
Google has always offered users a trade-off for its services: Let us know everything about you.
|
|
Using up two of them is a big ask, but that's the trade-off for going wireless.
|
|
In laptop design there is always a trade off when it comes to power, performance, and size.
|
|
As years go by, voters and legislators across the country will have to make a trade-off.
|
|
T. and I trade off cooking for each other, and today I banish him from the kitchen.
|
|
The book quotes a British government report of 2015 which spells out this unpalatable trade-off frankly.
|
|
Trump does not seem to appreciate this trade-off and is promising that everyone will get more.
|
|
The trade-off is that Part D premiums would increase, which in turn increases the government's costs.
|
|
We trade off cooking dinner pretty frequently; when he cooks, he buys the groceries and vice versa.
|
|
There's a trade-off between a totally neutral platform and making sure the highest quality content thrives.
|
|
These stocks trade off of growth in retail sales and sign up, and cannot be simply measured.
|
|
Every option strategy provides a benefit and has a corresponding trade-off in exchange for that benefit.
|
|
Debate has been framed as a false trade-off between the rival values of security versus inclusiveness.
|
|
Let's say from 200% to 2.5 or even 3%, that is a good trade off to make.
|
|
For skilled workers, this trade-off is worth it, but for the working class, it generally isn't.
|
|
Congress deemed that trade-off necessary for the more vulnerable endangered species — but not for threatened species.
|
|
That trade-off — wall funding in exchange for DACA protections — appears similar to a deal that Sen.
|
|
That's because the trade-off that some Republicans are pushing is too steep a price to pay.
|
|
Mr. Christian said photo organization illustrates a computer-science principle known as the search-sort trade-off.
|
|
Yet I wouldn't trade off the worst of the lot for the best of the other kind.
|
|
You can watch as much Netflix as you want, as long as you know the trade-off.
|
|
You'll have to decide if that trade-off for space and versatility is worth it for you.
|
|
In the end, the trade-off is going to be a longer build cycle, but not 2x.
|
|
The message that there isn't a trade-off between saving lives and saving the economy is reassuring.
|
|
We kind of trade off with each other, feeding him and going through our to-do list.
|
|
That may mean less savings over all, but the trade off is higher "guaranteed" Social Security income.
|
|
Amazon's search this year for a new second headquarters made this trade-off explicit for many cities.
|
|
And Congress did not view privacy protection and the free flow of information as a trade-off.
|
|
It's popcorn, minus the explosion into fluff — a worthwhile trade-off, sacrificing lightness for meatiness and crunch.
|
|
The parents in such a family, he wrote, confront a trade-off between two worthy egalitarian goals.
|
|
That being said, the wedding outfit may be the area that has the most difficult trade-off.
|
|
But those generous green spaces and relaxed atmospheres come with a trade-off: They're difficult to secure.
|
|
That trade-off is especially pronounced in emerging markets, whose economies rely on money from foreign investors.
|
|
That's the trade-off that comes with having a warmer bag for use in more extreme conditions.
|
|
Make sure you acknowledge this trade-off and determine it's worth it to you before you refinance.
|
|
But one look at what Houston is dealing with today seems to make that trade off easy.
|
|
"I do not think there's a trade-off," said Clorox CEO Benno Dorer, vice chair of GMA.
|
|
But they don't point out the trade-off involved: Workers in jobs sought by immigrants lose out.
|
|
Some fund managers are also trying to decide whether Venezuela offers a decent risk/reward trade off.
|
|
"If the eco label comes with a trade-off in performance, the public isn't buying," Barkenbus says.
|
|
But there's a trade-off: The participants snapping photos were less likely to remember information they heard.
|
|
Start scrolling to see how many people win in this trade-off, and how many people lose.
|
|
Watch how ably they trade off the role of "comedic lead" in this scene from Stir Crazy.
|
|
If he gets nothing, and he just doesn&apost do anything bad, markets will trade off other issues.
|
|
Williams said bad actors publishing false allegations is part of the trade-off in running an open platform.
|
|
It's overwhelmingly positive when people can communicate without barriers, but the trade-off is you're communicating without barriers.
|
|
Everyone knows on some level, that there's a trade-off between using Facebook and giving up personal data.
|
|
"I don't think there has to be a trade-off," answered Quarles, a Trump nominee to the Fed.
|
|
Broadbent highlighted the trade-off the BoE faces between keeping "significant" inflation pressures under control without hurting employment.
|
|
"There's a very clear trade-off," said Mickey Mericle, vice president of marketing and consumer insights at Adobe.
|
|
That's less than one percent per hour, and definitely worth the small drain trade-off for instant wake.
|
|
The trade-off is, in exchange for better music, you have to carry around the bulkier, larger devices.
|
|
The visual trade-off is understandable, but the more serious compromise comes with the hit to frame rate.
|
|
But I never considered that the trade-off for chasing a slow-materializing dream would be abject poverty.
|
|
Encryption also could be used, introducing yet another layer of protection, but possibly with a productivity trade-off.
|
|
Outschool's use of live video-chat and the small-group format removes the need for that trade-off.
|
|
Bring on the builderHow Mr Trump deals with this trade-off will say a lot about his presidency.
|
|
And it's certainly worth the trade-off of enabling waterproofing and giving more space inside for battery life.
|
|
All of these benefits are a trade-off with the risk of explosion, which can't be totally removed.
|
|
The package was immediately panned by pro-immigration groups, which said the plan was a bad trade-off.
|
|
They reject the trade-off offered by their president, Emmanuel Macron, between national prosperity and individual economic security.
|
|
The trade-off is that clearing woods and other natural features or building farms and mines happens instantaneously.
|
|
Yet the trade-off between principle and realism is more illusory than the government's actions or words allow.
|
|
If you can't live without the Google Assistant and smart replies, then that's a trade-off worth making.
|
|
But if the loss of maneuverability begets a gain in visuals, I'll make that trade-off every time.
|
|
As in all forms of human behavior, there is a trade-off, in reading, between speed and accuracy.
|
|
Ms. Even's family had enough money that this wasn't a trade-off so much as a conscious choice.
|
|
In the end, Google Photos solves multiple problems: It handles organization, making the search-sort trade-off minimal.
|
|
For a long time, this trade-off, if people thought about it at all, apparently seemed worth it.
|
|
There is a trade-off when you buy a smart speaker like the Amazon Echo or Google Home.
|
|
Mr. Lusk says the trade-off between no-till farming and more herbicide use is usually worth it.
|
|
There's a natural trade off there, though the negotiations have gone in fits and starts in recent weeks.
|
|
But moving came with a performance trade-off until Amazon answered when it announced Aurora two years ago.
|
|
Of course the trade-off is that the device itself feels great, and fits perfectly in your hand.
|
|
If it's going to cause people to consume the story differently, it's probably not worth the trade-off.
|
|
But the trade-off is that consumers may remain in debt for longer, and pay more in interest.
|
|
Many Indians believe hijras have the power to bless or curse, and hijras trade off this uneasy ambivalence.
|
|
The result seems to be a trade-off between privacy and justice that many are willing to make.
|
|
If you have no child care and two partners at home, Morgenstern added, trade off watching the kids.
|
|
While this means people's hands might get in the way of the display, there's always a trade-off.
|
|
This stark trade-off is what has made Syria the most difficult and painful policy conundrum for years.
|
|
The trade off here is that blockchain tech could ultimately eliminate the need for auditors and erase jobs.
|
|
I accepted the 65-minute difference as a productivity trade-off and the price of peace of mind.
|
|
But hanging over that trade-off is another one that he said so many African-American families face.
|
|
For consumers, giving up some data has become part of the trade-off of receiving compelling, personalized services.
|
|
"We are willing to trade off short-term per-unit economics for long-term higher engagement," he said.
|
|
Conservatives chose the opposite trade-off: big homes, spaced farther apart, but with schools and restaurants miles away.
|
|
The trade-off is that this would cost the government money — quite a bit of it, in fact.
|
|
The trade-off, though, is that I couldn't get my fuel economy average about 23 miles per gallon.
|
|
The trade-off was that only one white Democrat got elected (and he switched parties five months later).
|
|
"It's a huge, huge trade-off that we'd be giving up by not taking that route," he said.
|
|
There is a trade-off between decreasing effects from the well and increasing chances of triggering a fault.
|
|
I'd say 'no' because it could just as easily drop 50%, and that's not a good trade-off.
|
|
I think the trade-off for an abundance of long theme entries was worth it in this puzzle.
|
|
But the choice does not come without a cost, and the trade-off was clear on the catwalk.
|
|
"The key trade-off is that they generally operate with a restricted network of providers," Dr. Neuman said.
|
|
But not only are Republicans refusing to own that trade-off — they're refusing to own any trade-offs.
|
|
But perhaps the trade-off — a bigger screen in a smaller phone package — will be well worth it.
|
|
In a conversation edited for clarity and conciseness, Berger reflected on the trade-off between scale and privacy.
|
|
So what do you now think is the right trade-off between innovation and science and patient safety?
|
|
If Proposition 61 passes, it will be fascinating to see how this trade-off plays out in California.
|
|
I think there would be a growth/stability trade-off — How sustainable do you think that would be?
|
|
Japan's government is fine with this trade-off of fuel imports for crude imports, said a senior trade official.
|
|
However, with the new smart speakers on the market, you'll encounter a familiar trade-off with size and sound.
|
|
So, like, spending an hour here means I'm not doing something else, and is that trade-off worth it?
|
|
Perhaps the trade-off — a bigger screen in a smaller phone package — will make our temporary bewilderment worth it.
|
|
The other coach and I trade off bus-driving days, and today it's her turn to drive the bus.
|
|
The trade-off with CDs is that you will lock up your savings for a set period of time.
|
|
There's a trade-off between corruption and polarization, and our regulatory pendulum has swung much too far one direction.
|
|
But the big trade-off is that it's only good for in-car listening and lacks any streaming component.
|
|
But the trade-off for all those benefits isn't worth it because the Windows Store is an app desert.
|
|
The key is to assess the true dynamics of the trade-off and which factors effectively compress the load.
|
|
People recognize that there is a trade-off involved, said Stuart Ritter, senior financial planner with T. Rowe Price.
|
|
The alternative approach is simplifying the models themselves, making a trade-off in the interest of more ubiquitous deployment.
|
|
For patients like Murphy, for whom depression was a debilitating lifesuck, those risks might be a worthy trade-off.
|
|
The missing piece, in his view, is the feedback mechanism — aka instant and transparent gratification for the trade-off.
|
|
Driverless cars present an opportunity to forge a new and better trade-off between personal mobility and societal impact.
|
|
In other words, the trade-off between unemployment and inflation, known as the Phillips curve, has become less steep.
|
|
So it's a trade-off, and this was one case where we just knew the benefit would be there.
|
|
That kind of complex trade-off is what companies like Netflix face when navigating local laws around the world.
|
|
The policy now is to trade off higher overall growth for slower, more profitable and therefore more sustainable growth.
|
|
Millennia ago, when people obtained less of their energy from refined carbohydrates, the trade-off may have been worthwhile.
|
|
Researchers are working to reduce this trade off, testing the clocks against each other to try to improve both.
|
|
The fact that they can create their own work schedule around their personal life is worth the trade-off.
|
|
Of course, the absence of a lock also makes the experience intuitive and smooth, but it's a trade-off.
|
|
But the trade-off is that he also has given up some of the economic interest in his shares.
|
|
There is no trade-off between Detroit, Youngstown and Pittsburgh, on the one side, and Paris on the other.
|
|
But because a campaign's budget is not a fixed sum, the trade-off may be more apparent than real.
|
|
Second, it held that the longstanding notion of an economic trade-off between growth and equality is a fiction.
|
|
So, a bit of a problem there, but the trade-off is that you get a really big trunk.
|
|
In that case, Netflix could foreseeably apply the release model to other shows where the trade-off makes sense.
|
|
"The basic trade-off is: yes there are potential gains post-Brexit, but they are not easy," he said.
|
|
The trade-off is a weaker Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 card and only 8GB of RAM and 256GB SSD.
|
|
They're not as scratch-resistant as glass, but that's the trade-off with a lightweight pair of plastic lenses.
|
|
"I saw my decision as a trade-off between upsetting people and making a strong moral statement," he said.
|
|
What's harder to see is that if we did lower drug prices, we would be making a trade-off.
|
|
Not every bargain deal works out like this, but the risk-reward trade-off is so much better regardless.
|
|
But the thing is, the data trade off here — with the publicly funded NHS — is a rather different beast.
|
|
While those fleeing home might have the comfort of family, it's essentially "a social trade-off," according to Fielding.
|
|
Workers are therefore free to make the trade-off between wages and workplace freedom when they seek a job.
|
|
Some, however, do what they promise, even if the trade-off is a good bit of your personal data.
|
|
They're a trade-off between public security and personal privacy which we have collectively more-or-less agreed on.
|
|
So we are in the final stages of the negotiation and there will be some tough trade off required.
|
|
Thankfully, ML has a good eye for what's the best trade-off between strong entries and gluey short ones.
|
|
Here, many studies suggest closer to a one-to-one trade-off between workplace health insurance premiums and wages.
|
|
But there's a trade-off: Each time you fold and re-roll the dough, you are developing more gluten.
|
|
Considering that feature keeps you from buying a new bag every year, it seems like a decent trade-off.
|
|
Such investments, however, had a trade-off, as they sacrificed near-term profit for a hoped-for future payoff.
|
|
The sun and moon don't trade off mechanically, as we have been taught by nursery mobiles and cuckoo clocks.
|
|
He suggested that at the end of 2020, the S&P 500 will trade off anticipated earnings in 2021.
|
|
I found the experience a good trade-off, saving me some money while I helped someone practice their craft.
|
|
Companies are hungry to launch and grow, but scale often comes with a trade-off — security, or lack of.
|
|
Some people will intentionally accept that trade-off, with knowledge of the full picture of Amazon's data collection operation.
|
|
"People recognize that there is a trade-off involved," said Stuart Ritter, senior financial planner with T. Rowe Price.
|
|
I think a lot of people would be happy to do that, if they actually understood the trade-off.
|
|
Republicans simply say the trade-off isn't worth it, since it makes insurance a bit more expensive for everyone.
|
|
For most people, though, standing in line for an ice cream cone isn't quite such a direct trade-off.
|
|
And this process comes with a major trade-off — the bill can't add to the deficit after 10 years.
|
|
"However, an uncharacteristic increase in expenses points to better revenue having to come at a trade-off of lower profitability."
|
|
It has to be a trade-off or it doesn't work, and I think that we have seen right now.
|
|
A large chunk of the Democratic base now opposes increased border enforcement even as a trade-off for broader reform.
|
|
Nevertheless, the arrangement does indicate that there's still a trade-off when it comes to building a completely sustainable home.
|
|
Probably, the youngsters faced a trade-off between rewarding play and being used as a tool from time to time.
|
|
The drive is 19 hours minimum ... we don't know if Rob brought a friend to trade off behind the wheel.
|
|
Republicans just don't think the trade-off is worth it, since it makes insurance a bit more expensive for everyone.
|
|
"The idea that there is a trade-off between pleasing the base and winning is completely false," says Mr Steyer.
|
|
So make sure you read everything and you understand that you're making a privacy trade-off by using Google Assistant.
|
|
The best counter-argument within the American government is that such a binary trade-off would not be clever dealmaking.
|
|
Like, what is the trade-off between filtering and censorship and free expression and decency and all that stuff, right?
|
|
To me, it feels about the same, but I think the trade-off of size for thinness is worth it.
|
|
Overall, the trade-off is worth it, I think, but you are probably going to need to buy some dongles.
|
|
So you're either sacrificing privacy, device compatibility, or your own attention, depending on which trade-off you choose to make.
|
|
It could also design this choice in a way that flags up the trade-off to its millions of users.
|
|
The iPad Pro may be superior to a Surface, but a better keyboard cover would arrive in that trade-off.
|
|
The trade-off is made a little easier now because Google is finally including USB-C headphones in the box.
|
|
But it's a fine trade-off, a win-win for both Google and users who can't use a traditional keyboard.
|
|
Lant Pritchett, a development economist at Harvard University, argues that there is a trade-off between precision and political consensus.
|
|
Amazon's minimum-wage increase for its hourly workers comes with a trade-off: no more monthly bonuses and stock awards.
|
|
However, as Nolan explains in the clip, the visual clarity of the larger format made the trade-off worth it.
|
|
"Whatever the result is, the market's going to trade off of that for [two to four] weeks maybe," he said.
|
|
But bureaucrats crafting trade-protection policy face a trade-off between punching the other country and protecting their own consumers.
|
|
But like any type of managed care coverage, there is a trade-off: you must use in-network healthcare providers.
|
|
The trade off with cheaper bots is less advanced navigation—infrared sensors and less methodical cleaning—but longer battery life.
|
|
And while he feels some nostalgia for sentimental items from his past, Altucher says the trade off is worth it.
|
|
The aim of investing in unlisted stocks would be to improve the trade-off between risk and return, it added.
|
|
So there's clearly a trade-off between the obstruction's effectiveness and the political jeopardy it can put the president in.
|
|
Extending us those rights shouldn't be treated as some counterterrorism trade-off, because it denies our broader role in society.
|
|
That's the trade-off of being a teen dad: extreme difficulty in the early years but snappy humblebrags later on.
|
|
The region retains some leeway in expenditure through greater spending restraint and a trade-off between different budget spending items.
|
|
Courts held that voters shouldn't have to accept a trade-off between the defendants' and victims' rights, and I agree.
|
|
But while that figure may be more affordable, there's a trade-off: you're sharing a home with six other people.
|
|
But I believe that is the trade-off in our modern, money-driven world to be able to use Facebook.
|
|
During the talk, Siebel laid out the trade off tech companies had to make to get access to China's market.
|
|
"I was not convinced it was a reasonable trade-off," said panel member Martha Nason, who voted against the approval.
|
|
The instruments and infotainment setup are a bit of a trade-off, relative to what you get on the Audi.
|
|
Sabatier reminds us to think about the true cost of a purchase, and that there's a trade-off every time.
|
|
Thinner glass makes for better flavor, so it's a trade off you have to make for a great wine glass.
|
|
The Nikkei fell 0.2 percent to 19,203.30 by mid-morning trade, off five-week high of 19,289.43 touched on Wednesday.
|
|
The trade-off is a higher annual fee of $450, compared to the $150 with the American Express Green card.
|
|
Our goal was to create a scenario that would capture the classic trade-off between self-interest and helping others.
|
|
Although it's a trade-off, there's a benefit for the wealthiest of the wealthy in this new scenario, Sollinger said.
|
|
" Sudjic compares buying a smart phone to a kind of Faustian pact: "There's this trade off between privacy and convenience.
|
|
He lost some of his muscle mass during treatment, but that was a trade-off for trooping through it successfully.
|
|
There's always a trade-off between pursuing offensive rebounds and preventing fast breaks, and the Pelicans lean toward the latter.
|
|
In our view, the strong credit fundamentals of the underlying mortgages make the risk/reward trade-off an attractive one.
|
|
Career and family were never incompatible or "trade off" paths for fathers, who missed most "kid" activities during working hours.
|
|
I decided that the trade-off was worth it, but it's always tough weighing the theme against the nontheme fill.
|
|
So advocates face a trade-off: modest gun control measures at the cost of more weapons, not fewer, in schools.
|
|
That suggested something different: that migration might also be part of an evolutionary trade-off to get away from diseases.
|
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But recent privacy scandals involving Facebook and the political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica highlight the downsides of that trade-off.
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The trade-off, however, is that the funds are "at risk" for longer periods, should something happen to your employer.
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"If it does come to a trade-off between margin and growth, we will certainly prioritise growth," he told analysts.
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The key question is whether the employees understood the nuances of bankruptcy law that were embedded in this trade-off.
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Swing voters are real, the persuasion/mobilization trade-off is overwhelmingly fake, and candidates who take popular positions do better.
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Giving vulnerable kids access to inner peace does not trade off with changing the conditions that can devastate their lives.
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Some studies in economics support the theory that employers trade off health insurance premiums for wages almost dollar for dollar.
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And while that means the Razr can be thin and have a second screen, the trade-off isn't worth it.
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Coel, Susan Wokoma (as the alarmingly uptight sister) and Shola Adewusi (as the Pentecostal mom) trade off dazzling comic performances.
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You make a trade-off every time you choose a password you have a ghost of a chance of remembering.
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YouTube is always protecting itself with the lack of transparency, but it's a terrible trade-off for the creator community.
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The ECB faces a trade-off between the volume of its monthly purchases and the length of the QE program.
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In order to keep changes to individual taxation revenue-neutral, all that needs to be done is a trade-off.
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And I'm wondering the extent to which you recognize there's been a trade-off by [advancing] these centrist economic issues.
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But over the past decade that trade-off has rarely been a vexed choice, because inflationary pressure has stayed oddly low.
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The trade-off is that although cross-sectional data are much more readily available, inferring interactions from them has been difficult.
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Banning politicians wouldn't be accepted by society as a trade-off for flagging all of the white supremacist propaganda, he argued.
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This meant she had to always be on her best behavior, but it was an OK trade-off in the end.
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But as Musk notes, it's a trade-off Tesla is willing to make in order to push the envelope in innovation.
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I'm okay with the trade-off Motorola made reducing the thickness and weight of the phone by using a smaller battery.
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The trade-off is that her daughters may be worse at survival, but her sons will be better at sexual attraction.
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Until now, the trade-off between a fast Google-linked browser and a slow independent one wasn't worth it for me.
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People who wouldn't otherwise fully use their luggage capacity would trade off that space to people willing to bid for it.
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And neither would have been the end of the world, but it was a trade-off I didn't want to make.
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"It's a horrible trade-off between access to health-related services and keeping your family together in the US," David said.
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"Diet is a trade-off," Gary Taubes, a science journalist and the author of "Why We Get Fat," told Retro Report.
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As China and other authoritarian countries grow stronger, the trade-off between diplomatic realism and Christian principle will only get harder.
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The trade-off is specs: Lenovo's handset features a midrange Snapdragon 710 chipset alongside 6GB of RAM and a 3,350mAh battery.
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Many consumers won't mind the trade-off, said Patrick Moorhead, founder and president of global technology advisory firm Moor Insights & Strategy.
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It has multiple USBs as well, so you and your crew can share and trade off who has to carry it.
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"That is a real trade-off and we need to talk about it, rather than pretending it doesn't exist," he said.
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I pay (we trade off paying for dates) and somehow one soda, one beer, and two small combos are incredibly expensive.
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Of course, the proponents of a big shift in antitrust policy would deny the existence of a clear trade-off here.
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Cramer also thinks investors don't understand the trade-off for utility stocks between the demands of the EPA and rate payers.
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Details: Shuttering all of its retail stores was a trade-off to be able to sell Tesla's Model 3 for $35,000.
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Brexit involves a trade-off between what technocrats call "control" (meaning sovereignty) and "access" (meaning freedom to trade with the EU).
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While that requires more cash up front, Sarandos said the trade-off is worth it for more efficient, higher quality content.
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We talked to a lot of the drugmakers as well and I think their argument is: There's a trade-off here.
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This is a trade-off: what is unclear is how high an economic price she would pay to cap migrant numbers.
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Users apparently don't see the app as invading their privacy — or it's worth the trade-off to them if they do.
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The survey data shows that navigating the trade-off between meaning and pay is important for employers, and it is manageable.
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Instead, Samsung opted for side-mounted sensor, which considering bold nature of that bendy display, seems like a fair trade-off.
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The problem with this proposal is that there is often an inescapable trade-off between explainability and accuracy in AI systems.
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It's a bit pricey, but the trade-off is that you may be able to detect health issues your dog faces.
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Previously there had seemed to be a trade-off between inflation and unemployment; the stagflation era showed both could be high.
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"This is not a trade-off between privacy and security," says Mark Jaycox of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a lobbying group.
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For a health problem that affects one in six to seven couples, solid studies on this trade-off are shockingly rare.
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There should be a trade-off between a college being tax-exempt and it providing financially challenged students with robust scholarships.
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In contrast, we ask parents to make a trade-off that betrays the family values so many of our leaders profess.
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Those trucks also lose some of the tough-guy off-road credo that the Tacoma brings, so it's a trade-off.
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Once your children have it, the money will feel like it's their own, and the trade-off will feel real, too.
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In a global security climate traumatized by the rise of ISIS, decreasing nuclear nonproliferation programs seems a dangerously misguided trade-off.
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The Cullinan's turbocharged V12 makes easy work of something even as big as this, but there's still a trade-off here.
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The trade-off is that the amount of hassle is precisely calibrated to just how much you are willing to pay.
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Chief Financial Officer Rohit Philip said fare hikes in November and December offset that decline, making it the "right trade-off".
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Still, this could conceivably be an acceptable trade-off if it were accompanied by even larger retail price reductions, as promised.
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However, most experts agree that the thinner and finer the wine glass, the better the flavor, so it's a trade-off.
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The policy trade-off is one of the stimulative benefits of short-term economic shock treatment versus unknown long-term consequences.
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It was willing to make that trade-off and Apttus was left to reevaluate its future without Salesforce as potential buyer.
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This trade-off — the movement from the known to the unknown — is why D-Wave exposed their product to the world.
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The trade-off is that switching forces slower, more lumbering defenders onto quicker opponents, often in unfavorable spots on the floor.
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Still, that's a trade-off that may be worth the convenience that comes with AirPods' tight integration with the iPhone's software.
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But the trade-off would be little comfort to drivers, who are unlikely to move from that job to programming robots.
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" But Mr. Noorani said Republicans face a trade-off: "Is that going to be a message that turns off independent voters?
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Mr. Shaw stopped every now and then at the microphone to trade off songs with Mr. Langone, who was sweating profusely.
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Essentially, Americans would be trading affordability for ease of access, a trade-off many Democrats and reproductive health groups don't support.
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The trade-off for the convenience of trying something on at home is that you don't have access to much variety.
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States that don't adopt such waivers would have higher premiums, but their health plans would offer more benefits — a trade-off.
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A big trade-off with an Airbnb is there's no security personnel or hotel manager to help when something goes wrong.
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One theory is that there may be a trade-off in the body between growth and repairing molecular damage in cells.
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But what if the trade-off isn't so clear: What if you would be helping her somewhat and hurting yourself somewhat?
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Her campaign seems to not acknowledge the inevitable trade-off between economic growth and high spending, high taxes and high regulation.
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The brothers remain unnamed until the book's final pages and trade off as narrators, though the older one propels the story.
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Yet defining public assistance as inherently counterproductive denies the possibility that there may be a trade-off between values and effectiveness.
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It seems like a good trade off until Windows search mysteriously goes down for hours because of a Microsoft services outage.
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In the coming years, society — in particular, regulators and the courts — will have to decide whether that's an acceptable trade-off.
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You're definitely losing a small bit of grip here for full phone visibility, but that trade-off is up to you.
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Trade Off and Local 793 are waiting for Related to announce who will get work in the next phase of building.
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Trade Off and Local 793 are waiting for Related to announce who will get work in the next phase of building.
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The lead author, Adam Bress, of the University of Utah, said that intensive treatment could still be worth the trade-off.
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At this point, personally, I think the trade-off at most margins suggests a higher minimum wage is a good idea.
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This peculiar phenomenon is the subject of new research which finds that languages face a trade-off between complexity and speed.
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"We knew that if Trump was going to get his Space Force, there had to be a trade-off," Demirjian said.
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If the organization isn't willing to weather the public criticism, that suggests that perhaps the trade-off is the wrong one.
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Others will implicitly make the trade-off because they're not of the mind to seek out Amazon's Alexa privacy landing page.
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This list isn't exhaustive, but it gives a sense of the trade-off between coverage of these controversies and the economy.
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In an open Senate, the power to block action might be a worthwhile trade-off for the ability to initiate action.
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A year on from the referendum, it is a trade-off that most members of Mrs May's government have yet to acknowledge.
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If Britain decides to offer concessions on migration in exchange for market access, every inch of the trade-off will require bargaining.
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But he fears the solitude of the area is a trade-off for the culture he'd experience back in a big city.
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It's a trade-off that doesn't exist for the larger, 28-liter version of the Urbex, which features a capacious main compartment.
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It's an uneasy trade-off, but with AI poised to paradigmatically shift every aspect of modern life, including health, security, transportation, etc.
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" But at $95 ($80 with lockscreen ads), it's "a tolerable trade-off when you need a media-consumption tablet on the cheap.
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"Wendy's appears to be stabilizing topline without significant additional margin trade off, low protein prices likely helped," Bernstein analyst Sara Senatore said.
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What is more telling for Mrs May is what happened when the researchers asked about the trade-off between these different goals.
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Mrs May was frank about the trade-off between being in the single market and taking back control of borders and laws.
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TW: Do you think you'll get to this little of a design and that sort of trade-off on the Intel side?
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Over the past five years, the notion of a trade-off between increasing growth and reducing emissions has been put to rest.
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In contrast, China, where debt has risen from 0.2.25% of GDP in 20.25 to 22.2% in 22.6, faces a dicier trade-off.
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We only have one parking spot in the garage of our building, and my boyfriend and I trade off week to week.
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One other trade-off: the Mavic Mini has fewer sensors than DJI's other drones, meaning it may be more prone to crashes.
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Whether via online sales or a lower point price trade-off, one Deutsche Bank analyst says the retail slump may go deeper.
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I want this job (for) my family, and then the trade-off of that is I need to leave them there first.
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If the cost for that is that a single company dominates the field for now, I think that's a reasonable trade-off.
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"There is a trade-off there," said Vincent Papa, director of financial reporting policy for the CFA Institute, which certifies financial analysts.
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The Focal Utopia, priced at $3,999, are the nearest rival to the D8000, and they're a perfect example of that trade-off.
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That's, in essence, the trade-off: a direct listing is unlikely to generate the same potential return for investors as an IPO.
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Blending the two together lowered prices for those with high medical bills (with the trade-off of raising costs for the healthy).
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"Those who don't know anything except that they like to trade off of overseas markets, they just sold, sold, sold," he said.
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This means that small contributions to this trade-off — saving time over money — may have benefits for employers as well as individuals.
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In Britain, people probably just aren't used to trading off their emotions with cash (this trade-off is not even always possible).
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This is often the trade-off traders face – muted volatility can contain the market in both directions for long stretches of time.
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And in a future when traditional networks are less important than untarnished brand names, that was a trade-off not worth making.
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We need a new breakthrough in encryption, one that fundamentally changes the rotten trade-off we now make between privacy and AI.
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The trade-off, obviously, is that it will be a bit more costly to build the ship, but the benefits are manifold.
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Wojcicki says that legitimate creators were affected by these decisions, but the company believes that the trade-off was a necessary one.
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However, in some cases the trade-off may be worth it, says David Adamson of the International Committee Monitoring Assisted Reproductive Technologies.
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So if you take that at face value, ad-supported hardware seems to be a fine trade-off for plenty of customers.
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The trade-off was that these companies offered at the same time the potential for not just success, but rapid, exponential growth.
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Will they trade off the idea of car ownership as an extension of identity to gain back some of their free time?
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The trade-off is that such policies put a cap on how much the account can be credited if the market gains.
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But in most cases, it's a trade-off worth making, because they enable no-till farming methods, which help prevent soil erosion.
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And I don't think it is a wise thing for there to be a trade-off between the one and the other.
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That's particularly if policymakers – in the face of a trade-off between low growth and high inflation – opt to combat rising inflation.
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The social media scenario was one of two in which a majority of people said the privacy trade-off would be unacceptable.
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But the trade-off for that extra square footage might be limited shopping and dining options, so-so schools and long commutes.
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The trade-off is that the people doing the assembly are now low-paid randoms, but hey, that's the gig economy, baby!
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The final result: a never-ending cycle of a violent trade-off that most Americans would consider unacceptable within our own borders.
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The trade off for consumers handing over data is of course access to a particular Google service without any up front cost.
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What's not spelt out is the huge privacy trade off it entails — aka Facebook's pervasive background surveillance of users and non-users.
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The traditional congressional committee process has been to trade off five-minute blocks of time for questioning between lawmakers from each party.
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For this discussion, we should start with a basic definition of "trade off" as an exchange of one desirable thing for another.
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The trade-off is that the iPS cell technology will take longer to develop — perhaps a decade or so, Dr. Hildebrandt estimated.
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The rest of the day is a trade off: More clouds will roll in this afternoon, but temperatures should rise to 57.
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My friend group is really adamant about splitting everything, even though I'd prefer to trade off what we cover each other for.
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In this case, the trade-off is the ORM/ORY crossing in the middle (which is ugly but at least well-contained).
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This basic trade-off, of privacy for convenience, has been fundamental to the operation of social media sites over the last decade.
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Also, the State Attorney General's Office has opened a preliminary investigation into wrongdoing at Trade Off, which pays about $15 an hour.
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I think the trade-off is worth it even at this screen size, but you may opt to go the other way.
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Any such decision that we make has a trade-off, but I think there are interesting aspects to both of these solutions.
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Jonathan Lippman, the state's former chief judge, who led the study, said having the mayor on board was a worthy trade-off.
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Trade Off is the "poster child of exploitation," said Mike Hellstrom, president of the Mason Tenders District Council, which oversees Local 79.
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Trade Off is the "poster child of exploitation," said Mike Hellstrom, president of the Mason Tenders District Council, which oversees Local 79.
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When using these apps, Saudis make a familiar trade-off: swapping access to their personal information and devices in exchange for convenience.
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Now to sit in a circle, spread out that Halloween booty, and gorge yourself (or trade off) those trick-or-treat spoils.
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"There is always some level of trade-off between force structure, readiness and modernization — even at very high funding levels," he said.
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It doesn't fold, so maybe it's not the future of phones, but that's a trade-off I'm willing to make for now.
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But a separate biofuels group, the Renewable Fuels Association, offered its support for the proposal in exchange for another policy trade-off.
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If you're always on the go, though, that's an easy to trade-off to make considering how durable and light they are.
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The trade-off — in Constitution-reading circles, we call these checks and balances — is that the executive branch must abide by Court decisions.
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I manage the online sales department for my dad's business as a trade-off for living at home with my parents rent-free.
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While Thor is by no means a proper trade off on the badass lady scale, if we can't have Gamora in Vol 3.
|
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The watch itself is a bit clunky, but for people who enjoy power exercises, the increased accuracy could be worth the trade-off.
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" Instead, she says, "It's a constant trade off: come home early to have dinner and then stay up way too late finishing work.
|
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But all non-cinema content would have the bars at the sides, so there's a trade-off for that immersion when streaming movies.
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But they're also not about to turn your erotic evening into an identity theft nightmare, which seems like a pretty fair trade off.
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More important, the trade-off that Lee Kuan Yew offered still holds: illiberal politics in exchange for good government and high living standards.
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However, until the unknowns around privacy and security of the images are resolved, we're unsure if the benefits are worth the trade-off.
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Be mindful of the trade-offs you face when originating transactions, especially the trade-off between "customer servicing" and owning the end customer.
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I'm not sleepy by the end, but the trade-off for the alertness is a low-level unease that can last for weeks.
|
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But that's just a trade-off you make with a service that's free to watch if you can put up with the ads.
|
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I think about this trade-off constantly, every time I scroll through Facebook, use Gmail, or offer up my location on Apple Maps.
|
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That allows them to move much faster, but the trade-off is that they can't go as far or operate for as long.
|
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It's a trade-off Sony had to make for the zoom lens, which is far longer than on earlier versions of the RX100.
|
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But that trade-off has some worried that people with disabilities, an already burdened group, will face hardship by being forced to ask.
|
|
But that doesn't make it any better that this is the trade-off you're forced to make to take advantage of the rewards.
|
|
What Snap doesn't need is a privacy scandal, and that risk is the trade-off it's making with its more discreet Spectacles design.
|
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The downside is you'll take an hour battery life penalty, but the trade-off is it can be easily activated from the keyboard.
|
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The trade off in providing more robust coverage to individuals regardless of their health status is an increase in the cost of plans.
|
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The Tata Trusts might be accepting a trade-off: lower returns in exchange for the Tata Group behaving in a socially responsible fashion.
|
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For Jesse Tow, a 29-year-old policy researcher in Nashville, that overlap became apparent after making a trade-off with his girlfriend.
|
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"Everything we do with time and money is a trade-off," says Ariely, a professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University.
|
|
But the fill is mostly spectacular, and that's the trade-off for the work you put into solving a puzzle like this one.
|
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In the final trade-off, such was his reluctance to exchange that he visibly leaned back in an effort to avoid the shots.
|
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"You have companies trying to trade off these New York stories," but much of it is just "smoke and mirrors," Mr. Lannon said.
|
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Put it in the cloud, back it up, because that's ultimately what the economic trade-off is, is access back to the data.
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I'll take the trade-off, but I do wonder what some more formal experimentation in the context of this show might look like.
|
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In a way, these rules seek to find a better way to balance what machine-learning people call the explore–exploit trade-off.
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|
Ownership covered losses, with the trade-off being that Peretz frequently fired the editors and the magazine overall catered to his ideological views.
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I can maybe understand the philosophical rationale that that's a worthwhile trade-off if some of these people are choosing to forgo insurance.
|
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There are people raising awareness, but I think at the current level of deployment, people accept the trade-off that is being offered.
|
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For much of my life, I accepted this premise and assumed there must be a trade-off between inculcating academic success and happiness.
|
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Related columns: - Coronavirus confronts decision-makers with a terrible trade off (Reuters, March 18, 2020) - Storytelling in oil and other markets (Reuters, Feb.
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The trade-off is reduced convenience as there are additional steps to take during authentication and more limitations on what can be done.
|
|
At the time, that seemed like a reasonable trade-off — sacrifice the second revealer to remove four cheater squares and get better fill.
|
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Walmsley and his fellow officer would trade off between sitting at a Cold War-era computer terminal and trying to get some sleep.
|
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The researchers also discovered a trade-off between song length and amplitude — the more intense the song's peak, the less time it lasted.
|
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"There may be an opportunity to have some sort of trade-off there, where they can get margins to inch higher," he said.
|
|
They trade off singing duties, both performing their own lyrics, and alternate between drums and guitar (though Mx. Hopkins is the stronger shredder).
|
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"There's a fundamental trade-off between how much money you raise and the impact it's going to have on the economy," Smetters said.
|
|
But other studies of public-sector employees find little to no evidence of a comparable trade-off between wages and health insurance premiums.
|
|
Even if a majority of Irish voters were willing to accept this trade-off, there's more reticence north of the border about unification.
|
|
Here's the trade-off for that, though: tapping on the bottom of the screen feels genuinely awful when the phone is fully open.
|
|
Violet and Finch's inner monologues â€" they trade off narrating chapters â€" are exquisitely written with profound observations that have touched readers deeply.
|
|
It's the same trade-off parents have made for centuries, and it's a swap that many parents continue to make without much hesitation.
|
|
The trade-off in the abortion debate is agonizingly basic: A woman's right to control her body versus a fetus's right to live.
|
|
The trickiest area is the crunch trade-off between market access and the free movement of people, which is sacrosanct to EU leaders.
|
|
The trade-off, if necessary, would involve adding a small increase of one hour per day to the normal Monday through Friday schedule.
|
|
But even with this trade-off in mind, Ring has made decisions to not provide users alerts with new logins or other protections.
|
|
Judging by reviews (including ours), the trade-off paid off, as the size differences are barely noticeable, while battery life is significantly better.
|
|
He says the trade-off is a no-brainer, especially on vacay ... 5 minutes of posing, in return for 2 weeks of peace.
|
|
But Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg defended his company's ad-based business model said users were aware of a trade-off for free services.
|
|
"And basic norms of international relations should be observed, not ignored, certainly not be seen as something you can trade off," he said.
|
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We're making that trade-off, and maybe new platforms can emerge that will charge a $2500 subscription but will give greater privacy protections.
|
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"It's like the difference between network television and cable TV," Howe said referring to the trade off between broad distribution to freedom to experiment.
|
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The consequence is an improvement in the trade-off between employment and inflation (internal balance) but a deterioration in the trade deficit (external balance).
|
|
"Have an honest conversation [with your partner] about what's important, and make those difficult trade-off decisions," said Cosgriff, an advisor at BerganKDV's Lifewise.
|
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I think the president will have to go to the nation and explain the plan and explain what he&aposs willing to trade off.
|
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The central government's FY18 budget also continues its gradual consolidation efforts irrespective of the difficult trade-off with the desire to spur infrastructure spending.
|
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And if having some relatively benign secondary business benefit speeds companies toward assisting nonprofits, that's a trade-off we should be willing to embrace.
|
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Once you have an idea, you can use that formula to decide whether or not a product is valuable enough for the trade-off.
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Trade off One of the most immediate results of Trump's election was the acknowledgement that the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) was in big trouble.
|
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The founders say the trade-off is worth it—one report found that Amazon changes its prices more than 2.5 million times a day.
|
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This was a response to the idea that there was a stable trade-off between the rate of inflation and the rate of unemployment.
|
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Let's be clear up front: Everything in health policy comes with a trade-off, including "Medicare for All," no matter how you define it.
|
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"We'll take the trade-off of lighter profits for higher revenue—Amazon's earned it; We're buying the pullback," J.P. Morgan analyst Doug Anmuth said.
|
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You'll find that some phones, like the Pixel, are very good at reducing the amount of quality lost, making the trade-off worth it.
|
|
Another trade-off is that the new stylus is considerably shorter than you'd expect, though I don't find myself using it very often anyway.
|
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When you use either phone, it's a trade-off between screen space for streaming shows or playing games and the keyboard for sending emails.
|
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And while on any given day that may be a reasonable trade-off, over the long run, it inevitably means a lot of inflation.
|
|
You needed to walk the mean paths of Mêlée, stopping swashbuckling sorts and challenging them to a trade-off of pun-tickled put-downs.
|
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The trade-off is a slightly longer commute into Manhattan, yet the rising-but-reasonable real estate prices outweigh convenience for many apartment shoppers.
|
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Click here to view original GIFThe trade-off of an affordable 3D printer is that they're usually small and can only produce small objects.
|
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There was ultimately no big strategic trade-off between chasing votes in highly educated Dane County and chasing votes in working-class rural areas.
|
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Face ID on the iPhone seems like a better trade-off to me, but I'm not mad about the notch; the notch is fine.
|
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As students head back to school, parents are reminded of the costly trade-off for helping them obtain a degree: their own retirement savings.
|
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In Russia, too, there is a trade-off of interests between faith and state, but the state seems more clearly in the driving seat.
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It's a trade off for sure, but I suspect most users will find more practical every day uses for low light photography than telephoto.
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Mulvaney as a self-proclaimed deficit hawk: "I'm ok with larger deficits in the short term if the trade off is 3 percent growth."
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There's a privacy trade-off here, though, as everything you're typing is sent directly to the likes of Google for offering you those suggestions.
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For most NBA teams, the decision to go big or small entails a trade-off: sacrifice shooting in pursuit of defense, or vice versa.
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He also intends to publish mathematical proof that there is no trade-off between the mass adoption of the cryptocurrency and its remaining decentralised.
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The trade off for the glamour of this inaccessibility is that mainstream fashion can alienate otherwise interested people who can't afford access to it.
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This is quantified by Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle, which says that there is a trade-off between knowing the position and momentum of a particle.
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The future will belong to those who realize that there is, in fact, no trade-off between a strong economy and a healthy earth.
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The trade-off, of course, is that in the quest for security and convenience, customers are handing over marks of their unique physical identities.
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That's a reasonable trade-off for the 1 percent, since their wealth can shield them from any dire consequences that result from Trump's actions.
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The result is an odd trade-off: we get brown faces, but the society is unconvincingly color-blind, as if race had never existed.
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This trade-off between the degree of invasiveness and the fidelity of brain signals is a big problem in the search for improved BCIs.
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Each decision offers a trade-off, both in terms of repercussions in the game and how you're able to rationalize your choice outside of.
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"The trade-off for years in journalism was, I'll work these hours—the hours suck—but at least my morality is intact," he said.
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The only trade-off that some politicians may not want to swallow is that this will seem like a big gift to the rich.
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This console doesn't have a disc reader at all, but the trade-off is that it's a little cheaper than other Xbox One consoles.
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"Banks are making a trade-off between top line and credit loss," said Wei Hou, Sanford C. Bernstein senior equity analyst for China banks.
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Whether that's a worthy trade-off depends on how you feel about maximizing your World Series (and Francisco Lindor smile) chances while you can.
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So Trump would face a trade-off between maximally protecting his associates from legal jeopardy while still protecting their rights to plead the Fifth.
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"It's a cool trade-off in that if the bacteria evolves to be resistant to the phage it becomes susceptible to antibiotics," Chan said.
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And you know, I might be willing to make that trade-off if I can avoid the nightmare of last week's customer service meltdown.
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Surely some Democrats would trade off their inherent desire to tax the rich for a policy that supports their party's prized health insurance accomplishment.
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It just means that getting 5 percent more tensile strength from a material that costs 50 times more wasn't considered a worthwhile trade-off.
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There's a trade-off, too: Wireless charging is less efficient at transferring energy than a wire, and is thus slower at refilling a battery.
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I get a beer and it hits me hard, because I don't normally drink (but take other substances, *wink wink*, as a trade-off).
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For him, the trade-off was worth it, because you could not put a price on creative freedom, but it came at a cost.
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Hirt and her team generated a scaling model that explains why abnormally large size is often a trade-off for slower speeds in nature.
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We have long ago come to terms with the trade-off that to participate in social media, we must first give up our privacy.
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I'll take the trade-off of some vocal rawness and overly impulsive moments for the virile excitement he brings, complete with thrilling top notes.
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Caps and Perkz traditionally play the same role, but since Caps joined at the start of 2019, the two trade off bottom lane duties.
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"We have a trade-off," said Demetre Daskalakis, deputy commissioner for disease control in the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.
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Every one among the patients and doctors selected to meet him said the trade-off was worth it because it made the system fair.
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Since technology companies insidiously frame digital privacy as a trade-off, there's an implication that we must sacrifice something precious to gain something precious.
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These competing demands may create a trade-off for small-business owners deciding how to best balance their accounts while providing for their employees.
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Here, there would be a trade-off between accommodating an irrational injustice toward a qualified man and allowing these women the benefit of instruction.
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While power hitters generally strike out frequently — a trade-off for swinging aggressively — the Astros' lineup has an extraordinary knack for slugging without whiffing.
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Generally speaking, there's a trade-off between energy density and battery lifetime—if you want more of one, you get less of the other.
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First: while I do prefer higher-refresh rate screens, I am not yet convinced they're worth the trade-off for battery life just yet.
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The free agents alongside them may lose a few minutes of playing time, but the trade-off is that everyone draws more organizational eyes.
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But Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament's negotiator for Britain's exit, said there could be no "trade-off" in talks between such issues and trade.
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The trade-off is that it's harder to get from one side to the other in a maneuver, getting on and off the bikes.
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I ignored our relative lack of passion or spontaneity, and for more than a decade, that trade-off between safety and passion served me.
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And it wasn't just because its citizens failed to understand the numbers, the reality of the trade-off between coal and health care jobs.
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We, too, will need to confront the trade-off between short-term economic gains and the long-term costs of a large, unassimilated minority.
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This meant allowing in a little extra "crossword glue" (AGT, ELHI and SHIM, for example), but the trade-off seemed worth it to me.
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FACEBOOK'S AD-BASED MODEL Zuckerberg, speaking via video message, said Facebook users were aware of the trade-off between a free service and advertisements.
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The trick is figuring out which one you, as a society or an individual, are happy with, which trade-off you can live with.
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The benefit/privacy trade-off for smart/connected home products is a question that consumers are going to be wrestling with for some time.
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So the House bill not only has a profoundly unpopular trade-off at its heart — it literally cannot pass the Senate without substantial changes.
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This suggests that people are prepared to trade off their dislike of an intervention for achieving a goal they value, such as tackling obesity.
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It might not be necessary that we have to provide additional stimulus, it depends on how the economy unfolds and how the trade-off evolves.
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And while on any given day that may be a reasonable trade-off, over the long run, it just inevitably means a lot of inflation.
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By contrast, my kids also love puzzles -- but it's not worth the trade-off for the location and information tracking associated with many puzzle apps.
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Unfortunately there's a bit of a trade off I've noticed in my limited use, and infinite power comes with the need for some exceptional vision.
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When Steam worked well, it seemed like proof that a company could offer anti-piracy limitations as a fair trade-off, not a preemptive punishment.
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Yet the EU is clear that there must be a trade-off between fuller access to the single market and greater control over EU migrants.
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While going public allows investors to cash in and companies to raise money, it also comes with increased scrutiny — a trade-off for start-ups.
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It's the kind of trade-off the company says it's willing to make, especially since early tests showed no significant drop-off in user activity.
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Sometimes the female fish will carry the fertilized eggs in her mouth, or the male and female will trade off, which is called biparental mouthbrooding.
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The trade-off is that the danger zone associated with such a de-orbiting is much larger than that of a properly controlled re-entry.
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And so that trade-off is trickier than originally when we had seventy about $214.44 billion in costs per year, the first triage was quick.
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The trade-off essentially boils down to the time and energy spent to lower cognitive load, in exchange for increased probability in the desired outcome.
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Several of the company's top ballerinas trade off in the role of Odette and her devious doppelgänger Odile, each adding her own layer of pathos.
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By building inexpensive gear for those who don't mind a slight trade-off in audio quality, they've hit an interesting spot in the headphone market.
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Sean Clarke, the principal investigator for the X-2100 at NASA, explained that the design helps resolve a key trade-off that plagues many aircraft.
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But the presentation you get from having this incredible projector in your room instead of a dull black TV is unquestionably worth the trade-off.
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I might have said the heavy weight of these headphones was a forgivable trade-off for their sound quality, had they not cost, um, $3,799.
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Given the overall state of California's real estate market, the actual trade-off involved here is probably more favorable to consumers than you might think.
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The only trade-off is that the user would absolutely be required to have a mobile device, which has become the norm these days anyway.
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As slackening global demand crimps purchases of Chinese exports, for instance, the trade-off between domestic deleveraging and robust growth in Beijing becomes much starker.
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The structure of their band is also left-of-center: the members do not typically play one instrument, and they trade off with one another.
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Most celebrities are adults who have made a decision to enter a particularly glamorous world where the trade-off is, more often than not, privacy.
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So the big question is whether the edge-to-edge screen is worth it, and if the notch is a reasonable trade-off for that.
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If the new plants brought more jobs with them, that could be a good trade-off, but it's not clear how it would pan out.
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It's a wonderful trade-off, though, because the Hero230 required a case to be waterproof, which made the camera bulky and obnoxious to interact with.
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No. But is it a good trade-off between being safe, and also aesthetically, and letting people be able to move around and enjoy it?
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Still, Apple's new wireless AirPods and headphone-jack-free design is a trade-off at best and "irritating," annoying and bothersome at worst, reviews said.
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T. and I try to trade off on twin duty in the mornings on weekends so at least one of us can rest a bit.
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D. washes the dishes (we trade off cooking and cleaning), and then we rest on the couch to digest and scroll aimlessly through the news.
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But while we're more than happy with the trade-off, there's one exception to 'the rules' that we simply can't let go of: cropped sweaters.
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There's still no GPS on the Charge 3, a decision Fitbit notes was an intentional trade-off for the improved design, price, and battery life.
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As a result, most people don't understand the massive trade-off they are making with their information when they sign up for the "free" site.
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That's something Apple's expensive stand can't do, though the trade-off for that is the Surface Studio 13's inability to rotate into portrait mode.
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After the smooth ride and fun I had on the XSR 2900, that trade-off is starting to feel like it might be worth it.
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The VEP is supposed to weigh this trade-off between national security and user security by evaluating the implications of whether a bug is disclosed.
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Likely as a trade-off for hardline Republicans, lawmakers in Indiana also want to protect police, firefighters, and veterans in their new hate crime law.
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While digital comic distributors like Comixology provide a "guided view" to help convert traditional pages to phone screens, the result is usually a trade off.
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The only trade-off is that unlike normal Facebook Live stream, there's no option to let people replay the stream later or rewind to earlier.
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Supporters said its main purpose was to close the door on such a tax for the future, particularly as a trade-off for other policies.
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Now, because of the nature of the Internet, which relies on all those interconnected networks voluntarily interoperating, the convenience of centralization is a trade-off.
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The regional administration aims to mitigate the effect of declining state transfers through greater spending restraint and a trade-off between different budget spending items.
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Using an app is a nice fallback if worse comes to worst, but the trade-off is you lose the value of being hands-free.
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The trade-off is that while customers get 23/7 live text chat support, they won't be able to walk into a local bank branch.
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"This is part of the China trade-off," said Aswath Damodaran, a professor of finance at the Stern School of Business at New York University.
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A TRADE-OFF The University of Alabama's O'Neal Comprehensive Cancer Center, said it now refers about a quarter of its lymphoma patients to clinical trials.
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I spoke with Warren Gunnels, Sanders's policy director, and he told me that the senator doesn't believe there is a trade-off to be made.
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"At no time did our performance targets reward or encourage a trade off against safety," a company representative said in the statement to The Hill.
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But most parents are almost certainly happy to make that trade-off, and few kids will ever realize that Spider-Man isn't actually alive.[Sphero]
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If I scored badly on an exam because I'd gotten home at midnight after a performance, I reasoned that the trade-off was worth it.
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It is designed to prevent the rise of a credible third party, allowing the two parties to regularly trade off control between their respective leaderships.
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If you had also stopped to read the words on the covers of these tabloids, though, you'd have been reminded that there's a trade-off.
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This trade-off happens with the complicity of the elder dance instructors, but it brews an anxiety that chips away at the school's serene facade.
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Centre-Val-de-Loire's management aims to mitigate the declining state transfers through greater spending restraint and a trade-off between different budget spending items.
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Putting kids in the driver's seat (with some adult supervision, of course!) can help instill ownership and prompt first-hand lessons in trade-off decisions.
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The final category is team, in which two truck drivers trade off shifts in order to keep the truck moving for days at a time.
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No doubt, this method entails a trade-off: What is lost in poetic beauty and precision is gained in emotional, dramatic and even psychological immediacy.
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I never want to force it, and also sometimes there is that question of the trade-off, the value...it's all very elusive to me.
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Everything is a trade-off, and at the time it seemed like a reasonable risk in return for the things they could do for us.
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They trade off cooking and grocery shopping, as well as laundry days, and keep a shared savings account for paying the electric and cable bills.
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Folk wisdom holds the trade-off between breadth and depth to be a cruel one: "jack-of-all-trades, master of none," and so forth.
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It begins and ends with women, and at its center, two trios of women trade off forming and passing through golden gates, a beautiful image.
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An insurer or public program could use information about the price-benefit trade-off to establish not whether to cover a drug, but how generously.
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The trade-off of those decisions is a hit to the economy, with many analysts warning that many countries could enter a recession this year.
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As a trade-off, I spent the days before flights sequestered at home practicing disgusting personal hygiene, while speaking and eating as little as possible.
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The trade-off, space and time being finite, was skipping over some subjects, like climate change, that are top of mind for many Democratic voters.
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Yet this would do nothing towards the second goal: freeing central banks from having to divine the short-term trade-off between inflation and unemployment.
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If you&aposre working on a project that pays $75 an hour, for instance, paying $5 for prescription delivery might be a worthwhile trade-off.
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This console doesn't have a disc reader at all, but the trade-off is that it's a little cheaper than any other Xbox One console.
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Republicans and Democrats roughly trade off winning early November's quadrennial election, but in late November's annual balloting for the Heisman Trophy, there is no contest.
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A potential trade-off could be raising prices across-the-board but asking consumers to provide genetic information in return for a discount, Cortazzo said.
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The FDA cannot tolerate a whole generation of young people becoming addicted to nicotine as a trade off for enabling adults to access these products.
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"Up until now, there's been a value trade-off that marketers have had to contend with," said Linda Yaccarino, NBCUniversal chairman of advertising and partnerships.
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According to the study, teens juggling both work and school spend less time on school than those who are enrolled only, demonstrating the trade-off.
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If you aren't willing to make the trade-off, go to a nice beach instead where you can have all the autonomy in the world.
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The hour-plus commutes to their jobs in Manhattan are longer than what they had in Hoboken, but it's a trade-off they readily accept.
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Despite having plenty to do, they trade off shifts, one working on day-to-day tasks for the business and the other watching the baby.
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The trade-off of using machines to solve for routine tasks is that employees have more time do to work around brainstorming and strategy-building.
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For most of us, sacrificing a bit of driving sharpness to make the car quieter and more usable around town is a worthy trade off.
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Another effort to alter that trade-off is SmartFresh, a product developed with Professor Watkins's research that keeps apples from ripening too quickly in storage.
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That's a false trade-off and a dangerous proposal that threatens to make the daily lives of border residents, including my parents, even more burdensome.
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Major cities might reasonably hesitate to embrace a fare-free model because there tends to be a trade-off between price and service, Fried said.
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The cost might be a trade-off, like choosing one activity over another, but don't fool yourself into thinking that this is a free exchange.
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From afar, this is a typical Grammy trade-off, welcoming a potentially disruptive newcomer but on the turf, and terms, of a more established performer.
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The project illustrates our increasingly open attitude of letting people know our location... What are your thoughts on the trade-off between privacy and convenience?
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The big takeaway: Yes, these plans are generally cheaper (their biggest selling point in the administration's eyes), but that comes with a serious trade-off.
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It has argued that there is a trade-off between stricter rules and more housing, the lack of which is an enduring problem in Britain's capital.
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There still aren't any truly great-sounding NC headphones, but the trade-off you make is the tranquility of being able to tune the world out.
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There are, I don't want to call them threats, but there's a trade-off between simplicity and making your life easier and the collection of data.
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Normally, as an expansion wears on, central banks face the fundamental trade-off between keeping rates low to aid growth and raising them to contain prices.
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"Militaries understand the cost trade-off of going green (and) they are happy to spend a little more to receive the environmental benefits," says Jenzen-Jones.
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"Everything we do with time and money is a trade-off," says Dan Ariely, professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University and TED speaker.
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Like so much of engineering, it's a trade-off, a hunt for the sweet spot; and for most projects, optimal testing is decidedly not maximal testing.
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I asked Gnarbox why they ditched the micro slot and they said having that it made everything else slower, so it wasn't worth the trade-off.
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This is a trade-off space in which law enforcement cannot be guaranteed access without creating serious risk that criminal intruders will gain the same access.
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That the pain I carry is the trade off I made for loving someone so purely and I wouldn't change a thing about it, even now.
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