Panacea in a sentence as a noun

But Stripe et. all may not be the panacea you're hoping for.

It's _not_ the panacea to all our security woes, and they have never claimed it was.

The usual response is minify + gzip, but it's not a panacea.

It isn't a panacea of money, but it can be cheaper and can be stabilizing.

It's an activity, it has benefits, but is not a panacea.

Not a panacea for the patent debacle, of course, but an awesome step in the right direction.

Having money is certainly nicer than not having it, but it's no panacea.

Of course, this feature doesn't magically repair anything, but it's sold as a panacea.

He concedes that it is an architecturally superior idea but it is not a panacea when it comes to OS design.

I realize that the author is a libertarian, but this worship of the "corporate" government as some sort of panacea is really naive.

I'm sorry, but I can't outsource the computation of real time ultrasound denoising to EC2. Nor can I do the work of my LTE radio modem on EC2. Clouds and scaling out on clusters are great answer to a certain set of problems, but far from a panacea.

Can you please stop turning every thread into a diatribe against Google or pitching open allocation as a panacea to all organizational problems?1.

Panacea definitions

noun

(Greek mythology) the goddess of healing; daughter of Aesculapius and sister of Hygeia

See also: Panacea

noun

hypothetical remedy for all ills or diseases; once sought by the alchemists

See also: nostrum catholicon cure-all