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Again and again, she interrupts a good narrative with vain and verbose harangues about corporate strategy.
ECONOMIST: Hewlett-Packard: Her story | The
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Plenty of adjectives could be used to describe Gillespie: proud, cocky, adamant, verbose, ill-advised, rash, even stupid.
CNN: Caught on tape
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The full version resides at the source below, if you're looking for 51 verbose pages explaining Siri's inner workings.
ENGADGET: Apple files patent application for 'intelligent automated assistant,' sounds like Siri
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In Cuba he spots the verbose and oppressive side of the Castro revolution.
ECONOMIST: England, America and the politics of dissent
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If you know it, try using the website's numerical address rather than its verbose URL (Universal Resource Locator) name.
ECONOMIST: The faster the internet becomes, the slower it loads pages
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"I would have lost it long ago, " he says, noting the patience Daschle displays in dealing with his verbose colleagues.
CNN: Fasten your seat belts
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As one might expect given the subject matter, almost the entire debate about Unhitched has been incredibly verbose, overwrought, and conducted in bad faith.
FORBES: The 'Unhitched' Controversy And Christopher Hitchens' Fondness for Leon Trotsky
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She gets verbose when asked about corporate culture at Valve, about how she's never worked at a company where risk and failure are so acceptable -- even encouraged.
ENGADGET: Valve's first hardware beta starting by next year, wearable computing still far off
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Though Twitter isn't nearly as visually arresting or as verbose.
WSJ: Snip and Save or Put a Pin in It: Two Ways to Share Web Faves
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Oscar winners also turned out to be fairly verbose.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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He was funny, acerbic, conspiratorial, generous, and verbose.
FORBES: The Meaningful L.J. Davis
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The members of the group, which includes an urbane young doctor, a vain and verbose prosecutor, a Gogol-esque clerk with a laptop computer, and a punctilious military officer standing guard, grow increasingly irritable as they slog through lonely and uninviting terrain.
NEWYORKER: Once Upon a Time in Anatolia