Connect
in sentence
836 examples of Connect in a sentence
By contrast, today, when we have to build a major new apartment building somewhere, we have to build lots and lots of elevators and lots of fire stairs, and we have to
connect
them with these long, anonymous, dreary corridors.
For this reason, I see even more importance to look at architecture finding simple but affordable solutions that enhance the relationship between the community and the environment and that aim to
connect
nature and people.
And we have to
connect
both levels, so if you're up there, you're going to be reaching down and reaching up.
So we'll stick with the normal one for now, and I'm going to give you 30 seconds, every thumb into the node,
connect
the upper and the lower levels, you guys go on down there.
When was the last time you were at TED and you got to
connect
physically with every single person in the room?
So that question is really powerful, and it was certainly powerful to us in the moment, when you
connect
it to the stories that some Detroiters had, and actually a lot of African-Americans' families have had that are living in Midwestern cities like Detroit.
St. Luke's Medical Center in Houston, Texas, which has deployed industrial Internet technology to electronically monitor and
connect
patients, staff and medical equipment, has reduced bed turnaround times by nearly one hour.
And it'll take about another two years to
connect
the next billion after that.
And yet, despite all these differences, they
connect
with you and they trust you enough to cooperate with you in achieving a shared goal.
What metadata lets you do is
connect
that.
I can even imagine a day when it's routine for people to have a DBC to
connect
to their home computer or smart phone as a means to download their prescriptions, such as insulin or antibody therapies.
Being smart means the device can
connect
to the internet, it can gather data, and it can talk to its owner.
And Trevor was actually a little upset that you knew about his binges, because even though he'd been the one to
connect
the TV to the router, he forgot that the TV was watching us.
I think most of us know that these things
connect
to the internet and send data out.
To give you an idea of the magnitude of this effect, you can
connect
these two lines, and what you see here is that 18-year-olds anticipate changing only as much as 50-year-olds actually do.
They'll go into our brain through the capillaries and basically
connect
our neocortex to a synthetic neocortex in the cloud providing an extension of our neocortex.
In the 2030s, if you need some extra neocortex, you'll be able to
connect
to that in the cloud directly from your brain.
He learned that anyone could remotely
connect
to these devices over the Internet and download documents from hard drives attached to those routers, no password needed.
But the thing that I want to talk to you about today, the big idea that I want to discuss with you, is not that 3D printing is going to catapult us into the future, but rather that it's actually going to
connect
us with our heritage, and it's going to usher in a new era of localized, distributed manufacturing that is actually based on digital fabrication.
And then we're going to
connect "
Ge" to the DAC.
It's about how we can use technology to change the way we think and do and make music, and maybe even add to how we can
connect
with each other through music.
We have to start from the ground up, mining what already works for methods and for models, and to think about how might we be able to connect, in a kind of "both-and," not "either-or" paradigm, the innovation capacity of this growing network of tech hubs and incubators across the continent and to rethink beyond national boundaries and political boundaries, to think about how we can network innovation in Africa with the spirit of Sankofa and the existing capacity of makers at the grassroots.
I think the challenge is to
connect
the last billion people, and connecting the last billion is very different than connecting the next billion, and the reason it's different is that the next billion are sort of low-hanging fruit, but the last billion are rural.
They may be primitive, but the way to approach it and to
connect
them, the history of One Laptop per Child, and the experiment in Ethiopia, lead me to believe that we can in fact do this in a very short period of time.
There are many reasons that stationary satellites aren't the best things, but there are a lot of reasons why they are, and for two billion dollars, you can
connect
a lot more than 100 million people, but the reason I picked two, and I will leave this as my last slide, is two billion dollars is what we were spending in Afghanistan every week.
So surely if we can
connect
Africa and the last billion people for numbers like that, we should be doing it.
What we then need is to study the fundamental laws governing consciousness, the laws that
connect
consciousness to other fundamentals: space, time, mass, physical processes.
However, we were sneaky, and we proposed more: to convert riverbanks into pedestrian pathways, and then to
connect
these pathways back to the city fabric, and finally to convert the urban voids along the riverbanks into public spaces that are lacking in the Medina of Fez.
Instead, what we proposed is to make the plaza entirely pedestrian, to cover it with recycled leather canopies, and to
connect
it to the banks of the river.
The upstreamists are the health care professionals who know that health does begin where we live and work and play, but beyond that awareness, is able to mobilize the resources to create the system in their clinics and in their hospitals that really does start to approach that, to
connect
people to the resources they need outside the four walls of the clinic.
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