Developing
in sentence
6154 examples of Developing in a sentence
After that moment of inspiration, there came a very long time of effort
developing
a prototype.
This is a very complex challenge, and I believe
developing
countries could take the lead in this transition.
I come from Costa Rica, a
developing
country.
In the '70s we invested in national parks, and that kept us away from the deeply flawed logic of growth, growth, growth at any cost that you see others embracing, especially in the
developing
world.
So as a
developing
country, it is in our best interest to build development without fossil fuels that harm people in the first place.
It craves stories of success in dealing with complex issues, especially in
developing
countries.
It's also a chance for
developing
economies.
Number three: the biggest flow of funds from the developed world to the
developing
world is not corporate investment, and it's not even foreign aid.
But if you look at what we've done, if you have the courage to really look at it, you'll see that not only do our kids think their worth comes from grades and scores, but that when we live right up inside their precious
developing
minds all the time, like our very own version of the movie "Being John Malkovich," we send our children the message: "Hey kid, I don't think you can actually achieve any of this without me."
That's why Bill Gates is in China
developing
advanced reactors.
It's not about
developing
new products, but about enabling more children to experience the joy of learning through play.
They're
developing
cars that could decide who to run over.
And I can tell you, from working with roboticists, that we're pretty far away from
developing
robots that can feel anything.
Well for one thing, beyond the good PR, humanitarian aid is a 24-billion-dollar sector, and there's over five billion people, maybe your next customers, that live in the
developing
world.
And since then, we have gone from using stone and sinew to
developing
the most sophisticated and devastating weapon systems imaginable.
I had just spent the past 10 years working nonstop,
developing
video games for hundreds of millions of users, and I wanted to take a step back and look at the big picture and get some much-needed thinking time.
Those are the problems in the
developing
world.
As we as a society figure out how to manage the problems of the developed world and the problems of the
developing
world, we have to look at how we move forward and manage the environmental impact of those decisions.
The second thing you should notice is that the bulk of the growth comes from the
developing
countries, from China, from India, from the rest of the world, which includes South Africa and Indonesia and Brazil, as most of these countries move their people into the lower range of lifestyles that we literally take for granted in the developed world.
It's a new generation of nuclear plants that are on the drawing boards around the world, and the people who are
developing
these say we can get them in position to demo by 2025 and to scale by 2030, if you will just let us.
So we're calling our resilience-enhancing drugs "paravaccines," which means vaccine-like, because it seems like they might have the potential to protect against stress and prevent mice from
developing
depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.
It's actually the drug of choice in a lot of
developing
nations, because it doesn't affect breathing.
As you can see, many of them are young women, and they're doing fiercely interesting stuff, like Mareena Robinson Snowden here, who is
developing
new ways, better ways, to detect nuclear warheads, which will help us overcome a critical hurdle to international disarmament.
So, the lessons from seeing the kids using them in the
developing
world are incredible.
I was 22, it was my first time in the
developing
world, and I was totally alone.
Lack of access to clean water is a leading cause of death in children under the age of five in
developing
countries, and UNICEF estimates that 3,000 children die every day from a water-related disease.
I also read a lot of journal papers on water-related research, and I learned that currently in
developing
countries, something called solar disinfection, or SODIS, is used to purify water.
For the past three years, I've been
developing
technologies that could ultimately aid clinicians with rapid, early-stage cancer diagnostics.
To catch cancer early, however, you have to frequently intercept these messages to determine when cancer-causing troublemakers within your body decide to start staging a coup, which is why regular screening is so critical and why we're
developing
technologies to make this possible.
And in the spirit of the Hoover dream, "a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage," we're
developing
a technology that could ultimately place an early-warning cancer detection system in every home.
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