Devices
in sentence
844 examples of Devices in a sentence
So the key is this: As we move into the future, we're going to increasingly be able to choose our own peripheral
devices.
And the final big idea you'll have heard is that maybe it's a good idea we're going to know so much about brains and have so much access to big data, because left to our own devices, humans are fallible, we take shortcuts, we err, we make mistakes, we're biased, and in innumerable ways, we get the world wrong.
I wanted to know this because I've been starting businesses since I was 12 years old when I sold candy at the bus stop in junior high school, to high school, when I made solar energy devices, to college, when I made loudspeakers.
Class, let's be absolutely certain all electronic
devices
are switched off before we begin.
What if our
devices
could sense how we felt and reacted accordingly, just the way an emotionally intelligent friend would?
But perhaps what surprised us the most about this data is that we happen to be expressive all the time, even when we are sitting in front of our
devices
alone, and it's not just when we're watching cat videos on Facebook.
I think five years down the line, all our
devices
are going to have an emotion chip, and we won't remember what it was like when we couldn't just frown at our device and our device would say, "Hmm, you didn't like that, did you?"
So as more and more of our lives become digital, we are fighting a losing battle trying to curb our usage of
devices
in order to reclaim our emotions.
So I want those
devices
that have separated us to bring us back together.
They use these formidable
devices
like scoops, to remove the sperm from previous males that the female has mated with.
Proteins are being used today for an increasingly broad range of different applications, from materials that protect soldiers from injury to
devices
that detect dangerous compounds, but at least to me, the most exciting application is protein drugs.
We all use the same communications
devices.
And I think we really need to ask: Should a billion people around the world be using
devices
that are wiretap friendly?
We passed the point last October when there were more mobile cellular devices, SIM cards, out in the world than there were people.
We're not addicted to devices, we're addicted to the information that flows through them.
So thanks to these amazing devices, we have been able to gather precious information about tapir reproduction and social organization which are very important pieces of the puzzle when you're trying to develop those conservation strategies.
And the same is true for translucent solar cells integrated into windows, solar cells integrated into street furniture, or indeed, solar cells integrated into these billions of
devices
that will form the Internet of Things.
Because simply, we don't want to charge these
devices
regularly, or worse, replace the batteries every few months.
And we hope we will be able to contribute to closing the digital divide, and also contribute to connecting all these billions of
devices
to the Internet.
Today, every student who is visually impaired can read textbooks, by using personal computers and mobile devices, in Braille or in voice.
With these devices, we can measure the light that is there, even though we can't see it ourselves.
Increasingly, we're using mobile devices, and we interact on the go.
But mobile devices, just like computers, are used for so many different applications.
And so we wanted to know how can we take some of the same interactions that we developed for inFORM and bring them to mobile
devices.
And we're also interested in looking at ways that users can actually deform the interfaces to shape them into the
devices
that they want to use.
But what if we stopped thinking about
devices
and think instead about environments?
But looking forward, I think we need to go beyond this, beyond devices, to really think about new ways that we can bring people together, and bring our information into the world, and think about smart environments that can adapt to us physically.
We hear anywhere from 10 to 200 lies a day, and we spent much of our history coming up with ways to detect them, from medieval torture
devices
to polygraphs, blood-pressure and breathing monitors, voice-stress analyzers, eye trackers, infrared brain scanners, and even the 400-pound electroencephalogram.
Sitting in an awkward position for a long time can promote poor posture, and so can using computers or mobile devices, which encourage you to look downward.
With data on most current storage media having less than a ten-year life expectancy, scientists are working to exploit the physical properties of materials down to the quantum level in the hopes of making memory
devices
faster, smaller, and more durable.
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