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" ... Mixed-use ascendant. The live-work-play revolution has spurred an increasingly ravenous public hunger for walkable, mixed-use destinations where one can bunk down at night, earn a paycheck by day, and also enjoy some R&R after work. “People want a community where they can live, work and play without having to get in a car and drive,” says developer BTI Partners’ managing partner Noah Breakstone, currently creating the 52-acre Westshore Marina District mixed-use project on the western edge of Tampa, Fla. “These types of mixed-use projects inject new life into communities, bringing new residential developments and retailers to centrally-located areas that have been overlooked in the past decade.” ... "
" ... Similarly, Amazon's Jeff Bezos noted that his company competes vigorously against Walmart, Target and other retailers, explaining that his firm accounts for a slim portion of the overall retail segment. Zuckerberg made the same case for Facebook, which faces competition from ascendant social players like TikTok as well as rival apps like Apple's iMessage. ... "
" ... So it appears that size may be coasting on its reputation as one of the first factors to be discovered. At the time, it was extremely interesting to find a simple rule that appeared to beat the market, at a time when a firm belief in market efficiency was ascendant in academia. ... "
" ... Yankees. I have a theory that baseball is comfort food for America. It’s generational, easy on the eyes and ears, slow-moving, and provides a sense of familiarity. Baseball’s even more familiar with the New York Yankees ascendant, which could be the case for the next several years. ... "
" ... “The semiconductor industry isn’t a fast-growing industry,” Pisano says. “It’s an industry with some fast-growing firms.” Moreover, they found that those firms tend to switch often as different technologies become ascendant. Pisano likens it to a sprint around a track, with companies overall keeping a fast pace, but with a large distance between the laggards and the frontrunners, who are often switching order. “A company may have a growth spurt as they innovate, and then something else comes along and someone else surges in front of them.” ... "