Paradigm in a sentence as a noun

The old paradigm is flawed, and you're an idiot for sticking with it!

And I'm sorry that he's decided to **** on a paradigm that's helped build Silicon Valley.

Surprise, search is complex, context dependent, and not all apps can pigeon-hole it into your paradigm.

It certainly isn't some sort of paradigm shift, and it's hardly an indication that "no one knows what the audience wants.

"An example: before I learned it and realized what an innovative paradigm shift it was, speed is what sold me on git.

Hurd was that CEO, Apotheker is not. And getting out of the consumer space, at a time when there are several paradigm shifts going on, means missing huge opportunities.

Catalyze a shift in the world's thought paradigmAbsolutely.

In the coming weeks, Microsoft publicizes new products that incorporate their new paradigm.

Seen from a sufficiently distant paradigm, any web framework is the old, broken, inneficient way of doing things.

I realize people need transportation but I had hoped the rising cost of oil would cause a paradigm shift in how we commute, and that doesn't seem to be happening anytime soon.

The reality I have experienced is this: as your project and team grow, not everyone you work with will hit the ground with the architectural ambition to contribute to or absorb a new paradigm.

> and there's no compilation step or anything -- then it's almost a fundamental paradigm shift for what desktop software could be.\n> It already makes me dream of a word processor I could hack like that, or a music player.

The conclusions the author draws, that Gates was "anchored in the old paradigm of storage being a commodity that must be conserved" sounds like typical hand-wavy details-don't-matter business-person think.

The goal should be to enact a vector of a new paradigm, as proactive team players synergize an out-of-the-box strategy of functionality and infotainment, re-engineering the learning curve framework of your dotted-line relationship.

Paradigm definitions

noun

systematic arrangement of all the inflected forms of a word

noun

a standard or typical example; "he is the prototype of good breeding"; "he provided America with an image of the good father"

See also: prototype epitome image

noun

the class of all items that can be substituted into the same position (or slot) in a grammatical sentence (are in paradigmatic relation with one another)

noun

the generally accepted perspective of a particular discipline at a given time; "he framed the problem within the psychoanalytic paradigm"