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When You’re Reaching Out to a Stranger You Admire Perhaps it’s someone who works in a relevant department at your dream company. Or, maybe it’s that experienced professional who has a stellar reputation in your field. Either way, you’re eager to establish some sort of connection with this person that you respect—even though you’ve never actually met. *Hello [Name],* *I hope you’re having a great week!* *My name is [Your name], and I work as [Position] at [Company]. I became familiar with your work when [how you discovered this person] and wanted to reach out to tell you how much I admire your [skill or specific experience].* *If you’re open to it, I’d love to [grab coffee/connect on LinkedIn/other opportunity to get to know each other] to [keep in touch/learn more about your experience].* *Really looking forward to keeping in touch, [Name]!* *Best,* *[Your name]*

4 Email Templates to Make Networking Way Less Awkward

Kat Boogaard

I delineate them by the range of changes considered: **responsible AI** seeks to *make the AI less harmful*, **ethical AI** *challenges if AI should even be used* in certain applications, and **just AI** argues that *AI applications must actively challenge oppression* (if this is even possible).

Classification for AI Ethics

@willie_agnew on Twitter

The trickiest German prepositions are the ***Wechselpräpositionen***, also known as the *“two-way prepositions”*. They’re sometimes also called the *“dual case prepositions”*. These prepositions can take the dative *or* accusative: • *an* – “on (a vertical surface)” • *auf* – “on top of (horizontal surface)” • *hinter* – “behind” • *in* – “in, into” • *neben* – “next to” • *entlang* – “along” • *über* – “above” • *unter* – “under” • *vor* – “in front of” • *zwischen* – “between”

German Prepositions – The Ultimate Guide (with Charts)

George Julian

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