All
in sentence
17008 examples of All in a sentence
All
these guys are smoking cigarettes, and then I get an email, and they
all
quiet down, and in fact you can hear the chainsaw really, really faint in the background, but no one had noticed it until that moment.
We started out at the CERN cafeteria, which actually is great, because look, you have
all
the food and water you could ever want.
And that's actually the key design challenge: How do we take
all
this complexity,
all
this software, and implement it in a way that the user cannot see it.
Now, during
all
this time, he was holding a small notebook that sometimes he would open and flip through the pages and look at something.
All
the cards in order, just for you.
but I wouldn’t wanna deal with
all
the paper people politics.
And we could watch paper TV and it would
all
be pay-per-view.
There’d be a pompous paper parliament who remained out of touch, and who ignored the people's protests about
all
the paper cuts, then the peaceful paper protests would get blown to paper pieces, by the confetti cannons manned by pre-emptive police.
If we go back to when he was born in a nebula, We know that he never was thought of as regular, Because he had a flair about him, To say the Midas touch is wrong But
all
he went near seemed to turn a little bronze, Yes this sun was loved by some more than others, It was a case of Joseph and his dreamcoat and his brothers Because standing out from the crowd had its pros and its cons, And jealousy created enemies in those he outshone Such as the Shadow People.
But
all
the time I was out there doing these strange kayak voyages in odd, beautiful parts of this planet, I always thought in the back of my mind about Project Orion, and how my father and his friends were going to build these big ships.
Some of the sizes of the ships, ranging
all
the way up to ship mass of 8 million tons.
All
this was done by hand, with slide rules.
The bad news is, when I got in contact with these people to try and get some documents from them, they went crazy because I had
all
this stuff that they don't have, and NASA purchased 1,759 pages of this stuff from me.
Even with
all
those arrows, he thought it failed to really tell you just how iterative, interrelated and, frankly, messy their process was.
What can we do to make sure that
all
the disruptors,
all
the minority voices in this organization, speak up and are heard?
For sure, Vineet and
all
the other leaders that we studied were in fact visionaries.
But in those 15 seconds, he made me question everything we did,
all
the sacrifices.
All
it ever sees are electrochemical signals that come in along different data cables, and this is
all
it has to work with, and nothing more.
So I call this the P.H. model of evolution, and I don't want to get too technical here, but P.H. stands for Potato Head, and I use this name to emphasize that
all
these sensors that we know and love, like our eyes and our ears and our fingertips, these are merely peripheral plug-and-play devices: You stick them in, and you're good to go.
Now, here's the thing: The subject has no idea what
all
the patterns mean, but we're seeing if he gets better at figuring out which button to press.
Often, the digital thread is broken right at prototype, because you can't go
all
the way to manufacturing because most parts don't have the properties to be a final part.
We now can connect the digital thread
all
the way from design to prototyping to manufacturing, and that opportunity really opens up
all
sorts of things, from better fuel-efficient cars dealing with great lattice properties with high strength-to-weight ratio, new turbine blades,
all
sorts of wonderful things.
That meant we could access
all
the information we wanted, when we wanted it, anytime, anywhere.
All
the while, someone is making money off of the back of someone else's suffering.
About four months ago, we finally tied
all
this together and produced one of the first computer vision models that is capable of generating a human-like sentence when it sees a picture for the first time.
In the mini-mart,
all
those years earlier, not just two men, but two Americas collided.
The app is a digital facilitator that walks you through the StoryCorps interview process, helps you pick questions, and gives you
all
the tips you need to record a meaningful StoryCorps interview, and then with one tap upload it to our archive at the Library of Congress.
Nobody really expected much from people at work or in society because
all
the expectations then were about home and family responsibilities.
All
this, before it ever got near a computer.
If success were easy, we'd
all
be millionaires.
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