Digital
in sentence
2581 examples of Digital in a sentence
As I say, we were in the infancy of
digital
type.
So now we're on to the mid-'80s, the early days of
digital
outline fonts, vector technology.
George Boole took Leibniz's binary code and created Boolean algebra, and John von Neumann took Boolean algebra and created the
digital
computer.
They're these special wheels that can move equally easily in all directions, and when you couple these robots with a video projector, you have these physical tools for interacting with
digital
information.
But we were also interested in understanding what the home's
digital
emissions look like to the internet service provider.
If all
digital
data in the world were stored on punch cards, how big would Google's data warehouse be?
See, 30 years ago, you had the first
digital
samplers, and they changed everything overnight.
But what impressed me even more was that as I was waiting for my
digital
I.D., one Googler was telling me about the program that he was about to start to teach the many, many Googlers who practice yoga to become trainers in it, and the other Googler was telling me about the book that he was about to write on the inner search engine, and the ways in which science has empirically shown that sitting still, or meditation, can lead not just to better health or to clearer thinking, but even to emotional intelligence.
But the thing that I want to talk to you about today, the big idea that I want to discuss with you, is not that 3D printing is going to catapult us into the future, but rather that it's actually going to connect us with our heritage, and it's going to usher in a new era of localized, distributed manufacturing that is actually based on
digital
fabrication.
Not everybody knows how to use CAD, so we're developing haptics, perceptual devices that will allow you to touch and feel your designs as if you play with
digital
clay.
And I was taken by the conceptuality of this kind of
digital
print that sits in a museum in Charleston.
Digital
scrotum,
digital
media.
They've joined hands together to develop a platform which they call Spacecraft, a hybrid physical and
digital
space for crafting, more of a process than a product, an open architecture for making, which involves three parts: a makerspace kiosk, which is prefab and modular; tool kits which can be customized based on what makers want to make; and a trading app.
I'm talking about the design of
digital
experiences and specifically the design of systems that are so big that their scale can be hard to comprehend.
Recently, we starting
digital
banking.
We'll link that
digital
banking with biometric, and now women use the
digital
financial transaction by using the thumb.
Well, you build the largest
digital
camera in history, using the same technology you find in the cameras in your cell phone or in the
digital
cameras you can buy in the High Street, but now at a scale that is five and a half feet across, about the size of a Volkswagen Beetle, where one image is three billion pixels.
I'd been studying the art of Burning Man for several years, for an exhibition I curated at the Smithsonian's Renwick Gallery, and what fascinates me the most isn't the quality of the work here, which is actually rather high, it's why people come out here into the desert again and again to get their hands dirty and make in our increasingly
digital
age.
We got it just done in time to show you, so it's kind of the world debut of our
digital
imaging center.
There is a tool that can help us bridge the
digital
divide, respond to emergencies, get traffic moving, provide a new engine for economic growth and dramatically reduce CO2 emissions in every sector.
So this is Anna Hazare, and Anna Hazare may well be the most cutting-edge
digital
activist in the world today.
And this explosion, the Internet, and mobile technology, means that the
digital
divide separating the North and the South between countries and within them, is shrinking.
We've heard extraordinary activities of civil society groups who are engaging in local and global collective action, and this is leading to
digital
protest and real revolution.
Those of you who are comfortable with
digital
stuff and even smug about that relationship might be amused to know that the guy who is best known for "The Way Things Work," while preparing for part of a panel for called Understanding, spent two days trying to get his laptop to communicate with his new CD burner.
There’s more information available today and more advanced technology to preserve it, though we can’t know for sure that our
digital
archives will be more resistant to destruction than Alexandria’s ink and paper scrolls.
And by doing that, we converted these signals into
digital
commands that any mechanical, electronic, or even a virtual device can understand so that the subject can imagine what he, she or it wants to make move, and the device obeys that brain command.
Or consider Seattle '99, when a multinational grassroots effort brought global attention to what was then an obscure organization, the World Trade Organization, by also utilizing these
digital
technologies to help them organize.
And this raises a question: As
digital
technology makes things easier for movements, why haven't successful outcomes become more likely as well?
In embracing
digital
platforms for activism and politics, are we overlooking some of the benefits of doing things the hard way?
In Egypt, I saw another four young people use
digital
connectivity to organize the supplies and logistics for 10 field hospitals, very large operations, during massive clashes near Tahrir Square in 2011.
Back
Next
Related words
Technology
Technologies
Economy
World
Their
Which
People
Would
Services
Could
Other
About
Global
Platforms
Countries
There
Revolution
Information
Financial
Access