Minded in a sentence as an adjective

As for hacker mansions, people like to live with like-minded folk and code. What's wrong with that?

He does this in all the countries where no sane minded Billionaire would set a foot. Throwing money and feeling good is simple.

For the physics-minded, think of them as a sample of humanity in Schrdinger's box. It's not a cat, but people.

I read it and normally consider myself pretty open minded. But then you read things like this.

It's one thing to like something, but to hate on something else because of that is very narrow minded.

But I think most right-minded people would say that is wrong - otherwise we'd all be doing it. Kim Schmitz has made a lot of money over a five to seven year period doing this.

But, if when you say "if-by-whiskey" you mean the circumspect, open-minded, responsive practice of consideration, then I am certainly for it. This is my stand.

It is indeed astonishing how simple-minded this bug is. But these bugs come in all levels of complexity, from simple overstuffed buffers to logical ping-pong that hurts your brain when you try to follow it.

While it's true that those in their 30s or older can be closed to new idea, that's not because they're "old", it's because they're people and some people are closed-minded. I find a lot of these complaints are more about the cultural and lifestyle gap between those in their 20s and those who are older.

When I go back to Pycon next year I don't want to be treated differently and as a sound minded adult I certainly don't need people to censor themselves around me.

And while you might get frustrated for those 2 years as an 18-year-old hotshot upstart startup-minded student, in 10 years you'll look back on it and think, "wow, that really was the most important part."

We'll set new records for efficiency in identifying those critical of the regime and getting them separated from the pure-minded.

I think much of what gives psychedelic drug experiences their power is the duration of an open-minded state. If you have the skill and focus to hold a mindful, meditative state for one hour, much less 6, you will have a very potent experience-- probably much more meaningful than most drug trips.

Its like these individuals smell out good intentions and attempt to tax them for the perceived weak-minded good intentions. An example would be, after my brother created several successful startups using ex-cons, he wanted to turn the program over to the City.

Judge Alsup is as fair-minded and talented judge as one could want but he also is a tough judge in terms of managing what he allows to come before his court. And he is not buying the outrageously phony damage claims that Oracle is trying to foist upon this trial via its designated expert.

Shuttleworth's well-articulated comment and decision to close bug #1 show the kind of open-minded, flexible thinking I wish I would see more frequently from other project leaders in the free/open source ecosystem. The decision to close the bug reminds me of a quote attributed to John Maynard Keynes.

The question is this: is this doing well on HN because HN is full of progressive-minded feminists upvoting a neat DIY project on its merits, or is it doing well on HN because it serves as fodder for the nerd-girl fantasies of a primarily male readership? I really think this is an important point that often gets missed on male dominated social news sites.

A civic-minded hacker that wanted to improve the criminal justice process in the US could make a large dent in the problem by coming up with something that would help the electorate handle judicial elections. For virtually everyone living in a big city, judicial elections are entirely opaque; city papers don't even cover them.

NYT discussions here have been worse than on other forums, but just because it shows how technical minded people are as easily swayed by preconceptions and alliances as more ostensibly non-scientific minds. How many words have been expended in the other HN thread to allege that Broder -- after most have already established that he is a charlatan -- is receiving oblique funding from his Big Oil paymasters?

The line can sometimes be tricky to draw and can require careful and fair-minded judgments given the interests at stake. But how often do we have situations where nothing of the kind happens and instead the issues are decided, in essence, by who pays off whom and who has what degree of political or bureaucratic pull that can be used to protect systems and structures that are far inferior to what the new competition might offer.

After what this individual was subjected to, you have to be incredibly small minded to feel offended by the fact that his language reveals frustration or antagonism toward whites. By the way, I've also seen racism exhibited toward Asian immigrants- not the rockstar programmers matriculated in the US- but recent immigrants holding lower level positions.

Then there was Jim's high minded name, Jefferson, for the pursuit of happiness, but it made everybody think of the sitcom The Jeffersons. Then there was the legendary perfectly descriptive catchy epic name, that everyone on the team really loved, which we dreamed up together in a brainstorming session when we were all quite stoned, but by the next day we all forgot it, and nobody could ever remember what it was again, although we could all distinctly remember the warm glow of knowing that it was the best possible name in the world, which everyone would love.

It is also blatant in how it was done because only really small-minded executives lack the good sense to refrain from implementing a plan to use contract assurances as a ruse by which to "take a peek under the hood" of the startup's technology, to promise to put up a "brick wall" between the team evaluating the technology and others simultaneously working on a comparable internal development effort only to wind up sending the trade secret information "across the wall" within a week of receiving it, to make a record of acknowledging an extremely high risk of litigation after doing a crude termination of the relationship, and then to use the trade secret information wholesale while simply deleting the name of the startup from it. 2.

Minded definitions

adjective

(used in combination) mentally oriented toward something specified; "civic-minded"; "career-minded"

adjective

(usually followed by `to') naturally disposed toward; "he is apt to ignore matters he considers unimportant"; "I am not minded to answer any questions"