Word: answerability
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...that part of the legendary list of 100 things Google wants to accomplish? It's a little more formalized than that. We run the company by questions, not by answers. So in the strategy process we've so far formulated 30 questions that we have to answer. I'll give you an example: we have a lot of cash. What should we do with the cash? Another example of a question that we are debating right now is: we have this amazing product called AdSense for content, where we're monetizing the Web. If you're a publisher...
...your book you say the Pentagon made some "costly mistakes," including disbanding the Iraqi army and "perhaps never committing enough troops to successfully pacify the country." Why did that happen? I can't answer that. I don't know why it happened. I don't have any experience in that line of work...
...under martial law; and another seven years earlier, a general called Suharto seized power in Indonesia. Burmese and Filipinos, in particular, know what it's like to have tanks on their streets. Why, then, do so many of them support the Thai military's overthrow of Thaksin Shinawatra? The answer says a lot about the state of politics and democracy in many Asian countries?not much of it good...
...single day in 1994, volunteer bird watchers tallied nearly 3,770 bald eagles in the skies over Brackendale, British Columbia. Ever since then, this small Canadian town has rejoiced in the title of "bald-eagle capital of the world." Why Brackendale, you might ask? The answer is to be found in the annual spawning of chum salmon, which turns the nearby Squamish River into a floating buffet that North America's iconic raptors find irresistible. Spawning season runs from mid-November to mid-February, and the best way to get close to the eagles swooping in on their prey...
...only reason she was staying at the Charles Hotel is that it’s the one closest to where they live,” Ozio said. Ozio also said that Gutmann had not changed her mind on the Harvard presidency. “The answer has always been no,” he said. Gutmann is one of several prominent university administrators who have denied interest in the Harvard presidency. Others include Lee C. Bollinger, president of Columbia; Ruth Simmons, president of Brown; and Shirley M. Tilghman, president of Princeton. Gutmann was scheduled to fly back to Philadelphia yesterday...