Digital
in sentence
2581 examples of Digital in a sentence
I'm a
digital
immigrant.
It's a
digital
sculpture, so I wanted to add an interaction system.
MM: And that linking of the
digital
content to something that's physical is what we call an aura, and I'll be using that term a little bit as we go through the talk.
Basically, what he does is, he has all these services for micro-payments and booking tickets and all kinds of basic things that you would go online for, but he does it for people offline and connects to the
digital
world.
It's basically what was the system or the paradigm before the industrial revolution is now re-happening in a whole new way in small
digital
shops across the planet in most developing countries.
How to access the
digital
world?
How do you make this teacher into a
digital
gateway, and how do you design an inexpensive multimedia platform that can be constructed locally and serviced locally?"
We want self-determination in the
digital
age, and we don't want that phone companies and Internet companies have to store all this information about us.
But self-determination and living in the
digital
age is no contradiction.
So, in the future, every time you use your mobile phone, let it be a reminder to you that you have to fight for self-determination in the
digital
age.
I'm a
digital
creator, I make things specifically for the internet.
That's the biggest
digital
boundary in the whole world.
Capturing these stories and issues is part of my work as a
digital
storyteller that uses tech to make it easier for people to find these stories.
So these vocal effects can actually be quite subtle, in some cases, but with any
digital
microphone, and using precision voice analysis software in combination with the latest in machine learning, which is very advanced by now, we can now quantify exactly where somebody lies on a continuum between health and disease using voice signals alone.
I know that many people here have been splendidly speaking about the
digital
world and the possibility for cooperation, but [have you] seen what the
digital
world has done to American politics these days?
Instead of fossil fuel energy and large-scale manufacturing, we've got renewable energy networks,
digital
platforms and 3D printing.
Even more dramatic, Alex Todorov at Princeton has shown us that judgments of political candidates' faces in just one second predict 70 percent of U.S. Senate and gubernatorial race outcomes, and even, let's go digital, emoticons used well in online negotiations can lead you to claim more value from that negotiation.
Make it all
digital?
How to ensure our
digital
identities reflect our real world identities?
Now privacy issues aside, the other really interesting issue I'm looking at is how do we empower
digital
ghosts, people [who] for whatever reason, are not active online, but are some of the most trustworthy people in the world?
The topic that it's focused on, the question is whether or not all these
digital
technologies are affecting people's ability to earn a living, or, to say it a little bit different way, are the droids taking our jobs?
Just in the past couple years, we've seen
digital
tools display skills and abilities that they never, ever had before, and that kind of eat deeply into what we human beings do for a living.
And
digital
technologies are not just impacting knowledge work, they're starting to flex their muscles in the physical world as well.
So at the risk of repeating myself a little bit, when I look at what's going on with
digital
technology these days, we are not anywhere near through with this journey.
I hear once in a while, "OK, I'll grant you that, but technology is still a tool for the rich world, and what's not happening, these
digital
tools are not improving the lives of people at the bottom of the pyramid."
So as I look around at all the evidence and I think about the room that we have ahead of us, I become a huge
digital
optimist and I start to think that this wonderful statement from the physicist Freeman Dyson is actually not hyperbole.
Our technologies are great gifts, and we, right now, have the great good fortune to be living at a time when
digital
technology is flourishing, when it is broadening and deepening and becoming more profound all around the world.
I'm very confident we're going to learn to live more lightly on the planet, and I am extremely confident that what we're going to do with our new
digital
tools is going to be so profound and so beneficial that it's going to make a mockery out of everything that came before.
I'm going to leave the last word to a guy who had a front-row seat for
digital
progress, our old friend Ken Jennings.
I'm often asked, "Is
digital
media replacing the museum?" and I think those numbers are a resounding rejection of that notion.
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