They began to give way in the 1970s to the second wave: less costly midrange minicomputers.
Eventually mossy rocks give way to dense hedgerows, coloured with foxgloves and buttercups, then a red telephone box.
There, thick emerald forests give way to wild grasslands reminiscent of the African savannah.
Industries rise and fall, jobs are won and lost, recessions give way to booms.
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We saw IBM give way to Microsoft and now see Microsoft ceding ground to Google.
The drive, feeding anticipation, takes visitors through massive, planted forests that suddenly give way to meadows.
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He should not give way: regardless of the City's interests, this tax is a bad tax.
The prime minister, Manmohan Singh, will probably have to tell the home minister to give way.
In such a climate, the mood of nervous anxiety could give way to seething resentment.
Furtive pick-up scenes or moody vignettes about racial unease and prejudice give way to hopeful domestic tableaus.
Increasingly, the grassy American campus will give way to no campus (online learning) or a program abroad.
But it is equally likely that mutual admiration may give way to an element of mutual disillusionment.
In many cases, the result is that whole new markets are created, while older technologies give way.
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Just as corner shops give way to supermarkets, so single-screen cinemas may soon be overpowered by megaplexes.
For when you are among those who have less, you cannot possibly give way to aggrievement and entitlement.
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The old, taxpayer financing model clearly needs to give way to far more aggressive private sector investment model.
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This may show how investors will react when, as seems inevitable, traditional exchanges give way to 24-hours-a-day computer-trading.
As in Gaza, stability can fast give way to lawlessness, leaving Hamas or Israel to staunch the anarchy.
Politicians being who they are, the bitter rebelliousness in his party may give way to guilty, sentimental loyalty.
Bitter memories of the eight-year war against Iraq started to give way to thoughts of a brighter future.
The population in rural Kansas is shrinking, as family farms give way to industrial-sized farms that require fewer workers.
But if history is a guide, this exuberance soon could give way to the first pangs of electoral anxiety.
Illusion and failure give way to knowledge, but are the lucidity and disenchantment knowledge brings always better than illusion?
Independent-mindedness could give way to ostentatious partisan loyalty, already endemic in the Commons.
In the face of that threat, the European Union may or may not give way and lift its ban.
And friends say that, in private, the dolefully deadpan look can rapidly give way to a sparkly, sometimes feminine, charm.
Except a phase is supposed to end or at least give way to other phases not simply expand into a long preoccupation.
The Hong Kong dollar's peg would probably give way, too, leading to another round of competitive devaluations across the region.
Unfortunately, the chaos will likely shortly give way to a Taliban-style repressive regime led by the Islamist terrorist organization, Hamas.
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