Digital
in sentence
2581 examples of Digital in a sentence
Though the security implications of the
digital
age are less tangible and not as destructive as a nuclear attack, the technological possibilities fundamentally alter the playing field of international relations.
We Europeans need to be self-critical and admit that we are not only lagging behind in terms of technical capabilities; we are also in danger of not fully grasping in time the possibilities and dangers of the
digital
world.
Today, we need similar initiatives with regard to the
digital
world.
Today, we need a similar debate in the West regarding our strategy for the
digital
age if we want to overcome new challenges without denying our identity as liberal democracies.
This weekend in Munich, the Schmidts and Kissingers of today and tomorrow will have an opportunity to engage in what is probably the most important strategic debate of our time: how to prevent the West from falling apart inthe
digital
age.
Even without crisis-related imbalances, structural flexibility in all economies is necessary to adapt to the shifts caused by globalization and the labor-saving and skill-biased technological shifts associated with the rising value of
digital
capital.
The same is true of today’s
digital
innovations.
And the coming phase of the
digital
age will affect far more than just transportation.
We are not talking about the Internet of Things, but about the Internet of Everything: a more decentralized
digital
future, connecting people, data, and objects like never before.
We need to take a clear-eyed look at the strategic vulnerabilities that these technologies will bring, and anticipate how malicious actors could attempt to exploit new
digital
infrastructure for their own gain or to deploy it as a weapon.
Already,
digital
supply-chain security is far from airtight, reflected in recent reports of companies finding mysterious chips on their server motherboards, seemingly added at the time of manufacture.
The Internet, according to Macron, has become a site of conflict, where malicious actors exploit the vulnerabilities of
digital
products and services.
It is not too late for Europe to safeguard its
digital
future.
In
digital
newsrooms, which often have fewer of the inherent inequities of legacy media, the number of women in leadership positions appears to be growing faster.
Nuggets of
digital
detail illuminate how people move in and interact with the built environment.
Rising income inequality, exacerbated by the mismatch between skills and jobs in the
digital
age, will impede growth, unless a wide array of difficult structural reforms are implemented, including reforms aimed at constraining climate change.
Beyond the headwinds generated by slow advanced-economy growth and abnormal post-crisis monetary and financial conditions, there are the disruptive impacts of
digital
technology, which are set to erode developing economies’ comparative advantage in labor-intensive manufacturing activities.
Fourth, a realistic approach to the
digital
revolution is needed.
On the other hand, developing countries must accept the inevitability of changes to their growth models caused by
digital
technologies.
As with ComHIP,
digital
health technology empowers patients in their self-management and increases patient-to-provider contact.
And the institutions behind the project have gained access to a much deeper pool of consumers than they would have if each had developed a separate
digital
platform.
With modern
digital
technology, the returns to scale are so large that it no longer makes sense to demand that, say, 1,000 firms produce versions of the same good, each meeting one-thousandth of total demand.
At the same time, the new
digital
economy is less capital-intensive than the old brick-and-mortar economy.
A third priority is to improve women’s access to
digital
technology, which can open countless economic (and social) doors – including into finance.
In fact, women have already begun to thrive in some of the region’s burgeoning
digital
industries.
Building on these successes will require more training for women in the use of
digital
technologies.
In Asia’s booming Internet market,
digital
technologies could be a double-edged sword: If the gender gap is not closed, women will be left on the sidelines of the technology-driven revolution sweeping the region.
The
digital
market is not unified.
A country cannot prosper if its educational system lacks the resources and capacity to prepare its children to thrive in the
digital
economy.
Instead, they will have to develop a more sophisticated
digital
economy that takes advantage of young, educated workforces.
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