Electronic
in sentence
429 examples of Electronic in a sentence
So even if this object, even if this product includes some technology, it includes some speakers, it includes some microphones and some
electronic
devices, this object is not a very smart object.
This is what's becoming the dominant form of
electronic
gaming.
These are truly paperless offices with completely
electronic
medical records and so on.
The second thing we need to do is while we're spending billions and billions of dollars all over the world building an
electronic
health record, we make sure we put a place history inside that medical record.
At that time I was running B92, the only independent, for that matter the only
electronic
media, in the country.
Electronic
data elements are describing every aspect of the disease.
Our entire health reform discussion right now, health I.T., when we talk with policy makers, equals "How are we going to get doctors using
electronic
medical records in the mainframe?"
That sparkle you're seeing is not luminescence, that's just
electronic
noise on these super intensified cameras.
Made an intensified camera, wanted to make this
electronic
jellyfish.
Four hours into the deployment, we had programmed the
electronic
jellyfish to come on for the first time.
But what
electronic
miniaturization has done is that it has allowed people to shrink technology into a cell phone.
We designed an
electronic
health record system that is used by health care workers while seeing patients.
When I was in Cape Town earlier this year, I saw this
electronic
billboard on the freeway, indicating how much water the city had left.
They used
electronic
billboards to flash available levels of water to all citizens across the city.
For example, anything that spreads by a form of social contagion could be understood in this way, from abstract ideas on the left like patriotism, or altruism, or religion to practices like dieting behavior, or book purchasing, or drinking, or bicycle-helmet [and] other safety practices, or products that people might buy, purchases of
electronic
goods, anything in which there's kind of an interpersonal spread.
We've fished with many nations around the world in an effort to basically put
electronic
computers inside giant tunas.
Both the
electronic
tags I'm talking about are expensive.
There's extremely little about how Bruce Haack produced his music and virtually no examples of direct connection to later and contemporary
electronic
music.
Although I have a serious personal interest in
electronic
music and have a higher than average attention span, even for slow and/or difficult subject matter, I fell asleep while watching this documentary and had to review it to see the parts I slept through.
If the rest of the story is compelling, I don't care about details like how Stargher afforded all the fancy
electronic
equipment and underground chambers or why the FBI wasn't checking to see if he owned any other property or had access to out of the way places while they were waiting to see if the whole entering the killer's mind thing would work, but I do like to have a sense of what motivates the serial killer in a serial killer movie when he kills in such a complex manner.
This documentary - and I use the term loosely - follows the trials and tribulations of Colton as he tries to transform himself from a gay porn star into a singer of
electronic
(read: dance) music.
After that we get a detailed reconstruction of post-war Scandinavia with lots of amazing cars,
electronic
equipment and interior design; a minimal jazz score, nice cinematography and stylish titling.
What about the
electronic
piano guy?
The sublime camera-work supplies the film with an at times unbearable tension level and Brad Fiedel's chilling
electronic
score only adds to this effect.
In it I could divine the beginnings of German
Electronic
music, of 50's Stockhausen, Kraftwerk, Can, Neue, Faust of the 70's, the sound experiments of John Cage, Walter Carlos and the British
electronic
psychedelia of The White Noise.
During the days she has been missing, he confronts a man that's been following and he tells him that his been in contact with his dead wife from the other-side through E.V.P -
Electronic
Voice Phenomenon.
Soon after, he's approached by a Dr. Price, an expert in
Electronic
Voice Phenomena (EVP), who claims he's been receiving messages from Jonathan's departed wife Anna via sundry
electronic
gadgets.
These are all set to
electronic
music, which forewarns you of yet another montage, so that like Pavlov's dog you start cringing every time you hear it, which is about every three minutes.
The acting is terrible, the plot makes no sense, and the music is really annoying and WAY too
electronic
sounding.
The film picks up after last years remake with the military setting up
electronic
surveillance equipment in the desert where the attacks in the first film happened.
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