All
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17008 examples of All in a sentence
And I found poems by Andrew Marvell and Matthew Arnold and Emily Dickinson and William Butler Yeats because they were quoted in science fiction, and I loved their sounds and I went on to read about ottava rima and medial caesuras and enjambment and
all
that other technical stuff that you care about if you already care about poems, because poems already made me happier and sadder and more alive.
If the apple recognizer has seen A-P-P-L, it'll think to itself, "Hmm, I think an E is probably likely," and it'll send a signal down to
all
the E recognizers saying, "Be on the lookout for an E, I think one might be coming."
No amount of standing in the middle of a bookshop and radiating a positive attitude is going to turn
all
those books into braille.
And, of course, the most important is that you, I want you guys there, and I invite you to go to GlobalFamilyReunion.org and figure out how you're on the family tree, because these are big issues, family and tribe, and I don't know
all
the answers, but I have a lot of smart relatives, including you guys, so together, I think we can figure it out.
A couple of weeks ago, I was at a dinner party and the man to my right started telling me about
all
the ways that the Internet is degrading the English language.
I once went to the Google headquarters and I saw
all
the things many of you have heard about; the indoor tree houses, the trampolines, workers at that time enjoying 20 percent of their paid time free so that they could just let their imaginations go wandering.
And it's never easy because, of course, whenever I do I spend much of it worried about
all
the extra stuff that's going to crash down on me the following day.
And when life throws up one of its nasty surprises, as it will, more than once, when a doctor comes into my room wearing a grave expression, or a car suddenly veers in front of mine on the freeway, I know, in my bones, that it's the time I've spent going nowhere that is going to sustain me much more than
all
the time I've spent racing around to Bhutan or Easter Island.
And this is not easy at
all.
All
those buildings have something in common: it's that something is searching for desire, for dreams.
The tobacco industry externalizes
all
those costs, with an estimated one trillion US dollars per year.
But the thing is, the people around me, they didn't realize that I had no idea what
all
these abbreviated texts meant, like LOL, OMG, LMAO, until one day I was having a conversation with one of my friends via text, and I asked him to do something, and he responded back, "K."
So this suggests that, instead of telling people that they need to put
all
these symbols and numbers and crazy things into their passwords, we might be better off just telling people to have long passwords.
Now, I am free of the collar, free of the yellow raincoat, monogrammed sweater, the absurdity of your lawn, and that is
all
you need to know about this place, except what you already supposed and are glad it did not happen sooner, that everyone here can read and write, the dogs in poetry, the cats and
all
the others in prose."
Of
all
the many problems that the world faces, which should we be focused on trying to solve first?
Well, we hear
all
the time about how things have been getting worse, but I think that when we take the long run, things have been getting radically better.
But what did he do with
all
that power?
So now because there
all
these different things that scientists do, the philosopher Paul Feyerabend famously said, "The only principle in science that doesn't inhibit progress is: anything goes."
In the last hundred years, with
all
this technology, we now have more access to music as listeners and consumers, but somehow, I think we're making less music than ever before.
As a final example, and perhaps my favorite example, is that in the wake of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami disaster in Japan, a woman reached out in one of our singing apps to try to get people to join in to sing with her on a version of "Lean on Me." Now, in these apps, there's this thing that allows any user to add their voice to an existing performance by any other user or group of users, so in some sense, she's created this kind of global ad hoc corral of strangers, and within weeks, thousands of people joined in on this, and you can kind of see people coming from
all
around the world and
all
these lines converging on the origin where the first rendition of the song was sung, and that's in Tokyo.
I'm a cybersecurity researcher, which means my job is to sit down with this information and try to make sense of it, to try to understand what
all
the ones and zeroes mean.
I came in on a Saturday morning, and about 10 hours in, I sort of had
all
the pieces to the puzzle.
So this is really nice and helpful, but
all
this tells me is what I'm looking at.
That code looks pretty much like
all
the other code on that system.
But if we translate that information into a physical representation, we can sit back and let our visual cortex do
all
the hard work.
It can find
all
the detailed patterns,
all
the important pieces, for us.
All
this is enabled because we were able to find a way to translate a very hard problem to something our brains do very naturally.
There's one superpower left on the planet and that is the seven billion people, the seven billion of us who cause
all
these problems, the same seven billion, by the way, who will resolve them
all.
They pretend, they behave, as if they believed that every country was an island that existed quite happily, independently of
all
the others on its own little planet in its own little solar system.
The second reason is that these governments, just like
all
the rest of us, are cultural psychopaths.
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