Cloud
in sentence
583 examples of Cloud in a sentence
The software sensibility at Ushahidi is still at play when we wondered how can we use the
cloud
to be more intelligent so that you can analyze the different networks, and whenever you switch on the backup, you pick on the fastest network, so we'll have multi-SIM capability so that you can put multiple SIMs, and if one network is faster, that's the one you hop on, and if the up time on that is not very good, then you hop onto the next one.
Of course, all of these things are
cloud
based and don't require any training.
It's
cloud
based, and it doesn't require any training, programming, consultants.
And because this is such a low-cost system and based in the cloud, it costs, for the entire five countries that Camfed runs this in, with tens of thousands of girls, the whole cost combined is 10,000 dollars a year.
Someone who's down or depressed, they're under a
cloud.
And when there's bad news in store, there's a
cloud
on the horizon.
"A
cloud
over the cloud," was the headline.
It's the cirrus cloud, named after the Latin for a lock of hair.
It's composed entirely of ice crystals cascading from the upper reaches of the troposphere, and as these ice crystals fall, they pass through different layers with different winds and they speed up and slow down, giving the
cloud
these brush-stroked appearances, these brush-stroke forms known as fall streaks.
What about rarer ones, like the lenticularis, the UFO-shaped lenticularis
cloud?
Rarer still, the Kelvin–Helmholtz
cloud.
One
cloud
that people rarely miss is this one: the cumulonimbus storm
cloud.
But the one
cloud
that best expresses why cloudspotting is more valuable today than ever is this one, the cumulus
cloud.
If you close your eyes and think of a cloud, it's probably one of these that comes to mind.
All those
cloud
shapes at the beginning, those were cumulus clouds.
And then two years into the company's life, the federal government issued a proposal to build the first ever
cloud
database for Medicaid.
We call it the
cloud
of normality.
So here we have a couple of documents which our cybercriminals had uploaded to a
cloud
service, kind of like Dropbox or SkyDrive, like many of you might use.
So this is a word
cloud
highlighting the most popular words that were used by the most popular women, words like "fun" and "girl" and "love."
What happens when you combine these technologies together: increasing availability of facial data; improving facial recognizing ability by computers; but also
cloud
computing, which gives anyone in this theater the kind of computational power which a few years ago was only the domain of three-letter agencies; and ubiquitous computing, which allows my phone, which is not a supercomputer, to connect to the Internet and do there hundreds of thousands of face metrics in a few seconds?
[27% of subjects' first 5 SSN digits identified (with 4 attempts)] But in fact, we even decided to develop an iPhone app which uses the phone's internal camera to take a shot of a subject and then upload it to a
cloud
and then do what I just described to you in real time: looking for a match, finding public information, trying to infer sensitive information, and then sending back to the phone so that it is overlaid on the face of the subject, an example of augmented reality, probably a creepy example of augmented reality.
How many American leaders use Swedish webmails and
cloud
services?
A single country, any single country in Europe cannot replace and build replacements for the U.S.-made operating systems and
cloud
services.
Of course, electronic sensors have been around for some time, but something has changed: a sharp decline in the cost of sensors and, thanks to advances in
cloud
computing, a rapid decrease in the cost of storing and processing data.
Another medical center, in Washington state, is piloting an application that allows medical images from city scanners and MRIs to be analyzed in the cloud, developing better analytics at a lower cost.
It looks very menacing, like a billowing monsoon
cloud
or thunderstorm.
We think we could sit on the cloud, but if you go there, it's just mist.
That put a whole bunch of sulfur in the stratosphere with a sort of atomic bomb-like
cloud.
In 2012, State Street migrated 54 applications to the
cloud
environment, and we retired another 85.
And they're actually using that to counter the very large technological edge that U.S. companies have in areas like the
cloud
and Internet-based technologies.
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