Cable
in sentence
782 examples of Cable in a sentence
Reed Hastings: Well,
cable
networks from all time have started on other people's content and then grown into doing their own originals.
I mean, everything off, it's like the service call you get from the
cable
company, except for the whole world.
For wind tunnels, we would literally put them in a wind tunnel and blast air, and the many kilometers of
cable
and so on.
He spoke six languages, he played 15 musical instruments, he was a licensed pilot, he had once been a San Francisco
cable
car operator, he was an expert in swine nutrition, dairy cattle, Dixieland jazz, film noir, and we did travel the country, and the world, and we did have a lot of kids.
Just the
cable
without any bridge deck.
If we could make that
cable
lighter, we could span longer.
I was invited to be a guest on the
cable
news show "Countdown with Keith Olbermann."
I live without cable, my gym membership and nail appointments.
And by saying yes to diversity, I honestly believe that ESPN is the most valuable
cable
franchise in the world.
Now I'm sure you're sitting here and you're saying, I don't run a
cable
company, I don't run an investment firm, I am not a dairy farmer.
And that
cable
car is the little
cable
car that goes up to there.
I was chained by a metal
cable
to my bed.
So we disconnect the ethernet
cable
to create an air gap, but again, like merely human hackers routinely transgress air gaps using social engineering.
Now, my favorite story is this gentleman who looks down at his phone and realizes the battery is low, so he turns around like this in the car and digs around in his backpack, pulls out his laptop, puts it on the seat, goes in the back again, digs around, pulls out the charging
cable
for his phone, futzes around, puts it into the laptop, puts it on the phone.
This breakdown of trust in media gatekeepers lead to alternative newspapers, radio shows, and
cable
news competing with the major outlets and covering events from various perspectives.
So, imagine you're looking at something like a
cable
supporting a traffic light.
And the idea that maybe the big dimensions around us are the ones that we can easily see, but there might be additional dimensions curled up, sort of like the circular part of that cable, so small that they have so far remained invisible.
Instead of signing up for streaming services and getting a
cable
bill, what if my television analyzed my watching habits and recommended well-priced content that fit within my budget that I would enjoy?
It is easy to understand why: the oceans are an unforgiving place, and to collect in situ data, you need a big ship, capable of carrying a vast amount of fuel and large crews, costing hundreds of millions of dollars each, or, big buoys tethered to the ocean floor with a four-mile-long
cable
and weighted down by a set of train wheels, which is both dangerous to deploy and expensive to maintain.
This is not like
cable
news.
My first debate in the cavernous auditorium of Canberra Girls Grammar School was kind of a bundle of all of the worst mistakes that you see on
cable
news.
Anyway, we tend to forget it, but politicians and intellectuals have been warning us for decades now that the United States is facing a crisis of civility, and they've tended to blame that crisis on technological developments, on things like
cable
TV, talk radio, social media.
I want you to imagine the supporter of some Little Englander or British nationalist political party, and he's sitting at home and he's screaming about foreigners invading his country while watching Fox News, an American
cable
channel owned by an Australian on his South Korean television set which was bought by his Spanish credit card which is paid off monthly by his high-street British bank which has its headquarters in Hong Kong.
The next year they march forward and they introduce Qube, the first interactive
cable
TV system, and the New York Times heralds this as telecommunications moving to the home, convergence, great things are happening.
And further stimulus came with the deregulation of the
cable
television industry, and the re-regulation of the
cable
television industry.
Ted Turner: We did the work to build this, this
cable
industry, now the broadcasters want some of our money.
I now think a network boss is anyone who has a
cable
modem.
All the neck and the tail are cable, so it moves smoothly and organically.
However, in the late '90s, I started noticing the role of technology in Nigeria:
cable
TV and cell phones in the village, 419 scammers occupying the cybercafes, the small generator connected to my cousin's desktop computer because the power was always going on and off.
In 2012, a team of Japanese and Danish researchers set a world record, transmitting 1 petabit of data— that’s 10,000 hours of high-def video— over a fifty-kilometer cable, in a second.
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