Digital
in sentence
2581 examples of Digital in a sentence
That's because
digital
money isn't really mine, it's entries in databases that belong to my bank, my credit card company or my investment firm.
In a
digital
world, money can reach much farther and is much faster, but we're at the mercy of these gatekeeper institutions.
Cryptocurrencies are
digital
money that isn't run by any government or bank.
Power is cascading to the young like never before because of our increasing reliance on DQ:
digital
intelligence.
We're seeing young founders of companies in their early 20s scale them up to global giants by the time they get to 30, and yet, we expect these young
digital
leaders to somehow miraculously embody the relationship wisdoms we older workers have had decades to learn.
So how can we get companies to tap into that wisdom of the midlife folks, just as they nurture their
digital
young geniuses as well?
It's a law that regulates
digital
material and content.
You'll be surprised to learn that it's the underlying technology of
digital
currencies like Bitcoin.
And the biggest problem is that overall, they've appropriated the largesse of the
digital
age asymmetrically: we have wealth creation, but we have growing social inequality.
Well, in 2008, the financial industry crashed and, perhaps propitiously, an anonymous person or persons named Satoshi Nakamoto created a paper where he developed a protocol for a
digital
cash that used an underlying cryptocurrency called Bitcoin.
And they compete: the first miner to find out the truth and to validate the block, is rewarded in
digital
currency, in the case of the Bitcoin blockchain, with Bitcoin.
And every one is time-stamped, kind of like with a
digital
waxed seal.
Number four: the most powerful asset of the
digital
age is data.
We create this asset, and we leave this trail of
digital
crumbs behind us as we go throughout life.
It's free, or maybe a few micro-cents that flow into a
digital
account.
For instance, do men and women trust differently in
digital
environments?
We're starting to realize that institutional trust wasn't designed for the
digital
age.
In many
digital
health discussions, people believe in and embrace the idea that we can simply digitize the data, wirelessly transmit it, send it to the cloud, and in the cloud, we can extract meaningful information for interpretation.
It's more like you take the system and you feed it lots of data, including unstructured data, like the kind we generate in our
digital
lives.
But with these systems, it is more complicated, and here's why: Currently, computational systems can infer all sorts of things about you from your
digital
crumbs, even if you have not disclosed those things.
And so if we do nothing to address the
digital
security divide, if we do nothing to ensure that everyone in our society gets the same benefits of encryption and is equally able to protect themselves from surveillance by the state, not only will the poor and vulnerable be exposed to surveillance, but future civil rights movements may be crushed before they ever reach their full potential.
It stores the history of custodianship, ownership and location for assets like the
digital
currency Bitcoin, other
digital
assets like a title of ownership of IP.
Having this kind of portable identity around the physical world and the
digital
world means we can do all kinds of human trade in a totally new way.
As a real-world object travels along, we can see its
digital
certificate or token move on the blockchain, adding value as it goes.
Blockchains give us the technological capability of creating a record of human exchange, of exchange of currency, of all kinds of
digital
and physical assets, even of our own personal attributes, in a totally new way.
They want to learn
digital
technology and green technologies.
And there is the secondary school teacher, who is teaching them about
digital
technology and a good secondary school education, without them ever having to leave their own communities.
Computers were programmed to swap out error-prone, inconsistent human calculation with
digital
perfection.
Number one: we have to start with
digital
media literacy, and clearly it must have a gendered lens.
To make the balconies more comfortable for a longer period of time during the year, we studied the wind with
digital
simulations, so the effect of the balcony shapes breaks up the wind and confuses the wind and makes the balconies more comfortable and less windy.
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