Computer
in sentence
2497 examples of Computer in a sentence
So we joined forces with Georgia Tech, with Thad Starner's wearable computing group, to build us an underwater wearable
computer
that we're calling CHAT.
The
computer
can localize who requested the toy if there's a word match.
So Diver A and Diver B both have a wearable
computer
and the dolphin hears the whistle as a whistle, the diver hears the whistle as a whistle in the water, but also as a word through bone conduction.
For example, right now we can put their own signature whistles in the
computer
and request to interact with a specific dolphin.
I'm going to start worrying about those the day my
computer
becomes aware of my printer.
So you know how it ended up, Spencer Tracy brought a computer, a mainframe
computer
of 1957, in to help the librarians.
And this mainframe
computer
was going to help them with that job.
Well of course a mainframe
computer
in 1957 wasn't much use for that job.
On board are also a battery, a computer, various sensors and wireless radios.
And if so, could we train a
computer
to read our thoughts?
GG: As we show Christy hundreds of these images, we are also capturing the electrical waves onto Nathan's
computer.
Now, our eyes are not very good at picking up patterns in noisy data, but machine learning algorithms are designed to do just that, so could we take a lot of pictures and a lot of data and feed it in and train a
computer
to be able to interpret what Christy is looking at in real time?
We noticed that the data was coming into our
computer
very quickly, without any timing of when the images came on, and that's the equivalent of reading a very long sentence without spaces between the words.
By using a sensor, we can tell the
computer
when the image first appears.
But eventually that data, hopefully, gets typed into a computer, and someone can begin to analyze it, and once they have an analysis and a report, hopefully, then you can take the results of that data collection and use it to vaccinate children better.
Sometimes it can take two years to type that information into a computer, And sometimes, actually not infrequently, it actually never happens.
And then for some reason, momentum is lost or there's no money left, and all of that comes to nothing, because no one actually types it into the
computer
at all.
Because if we can do that, if we can actually just collect the data electronically, digitally, from the very beginning, we can just put a shortcut right through that whole process of typing, of having somebody type that stuff into the
computer.
But what we found, of course, since it's already on a computer, we can deliver instant maps and analysis and graphing.
It was about problems with
computer
processing over the Internet.
It's an antidote to the growing tendency we have to feel that we can really ever experience life by watching it on a
computer
screen, you know, when we're in a wi-fi zone.
At Microsoft Applied Sciences, along with my mentor Cati Boulanger, I redesigned the
computer
and turned a little space above the keyboard into a digital workspace.
Students can use this as a tool to learn about the complex concepts such as planetary motion, physics, and unlike
computer
screens or textbooks, this is a real, tangible experience that you can touch and feel, and it's very powerful.
And what's more exciting than just turning what's currently in the
computer
physical is to start imagining how programming the world will alter even our daily physical activities.
Alright, now raise your hand if your
computer
has ever crashed.
So if we could switch to the audio from this computer, we've been video conferencing with cognitive animals, and we're going to have each of them just briefly introduce them.
So at that point, if we can go back to the other computer, we were starting to think about how you integrate the rest of the biomass of the planet into the Internet, and we went to the best possible person I can think of, which is Vint Cerf, who is one of the founders who gave us the Internet.
This is what the Internet looks like to a
computer
that's trying to figure out where the traffic is supposed to go.
I've got a lot to learn, I'm a
computer
engineer, I've got long hair, but I'm working under Andy Grove, who's been called the greatest manager of his or any other era.
Either it doesn't exist at all, or it's something else, a
computer
program or some damn fool thing, but in any case it's not part of science.
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