Information
in sentence
6149 examples of Information in a sentence
Rather, they're released in very specific locations and they act on specific synapses to change the flow of
information
in the brain.
We do the opposite, which is: everybody gets all the
information.
There's barely any
information
available on how to use them, and very little is said about how they are produced.
It's a website where we, and anyone else who wants to join us, share experiments, publish information, encourage others to contribute whenever they can, and aggregate resources such as research papers and tutorials by other makers like ourselves.
We would like it to become a large, collectively generated database of do-it-yourself
information
on smart materials.
And the way the Internet works is the routers are basically exchanging
information
about how they can get messages to places, and this one processor, because of a broken card, decided it could actually get a message to some place in negative time.
Because many of us stay in contact with family members still inside, and we send
information
and money that is helping to change North Korea from inside.
You would think this wouldn't be too hard, that we would simply have the ability to take this fundamental
information
that we're learning about how it is that basic biology teaches us about the causes of disease and build a bridge across this yawning gap between what we've learned about basic science and its application, a bridge that would look maybe something like this, where you'd have to put together a nice shiny way to get from one side to the other.
We make three mistakes: the first is underestimating the quantity of
information
that we produce every day; the second is depreciating the value of that information; and the third is thinking that our principal problem is a distant and super powerful agency that is called NSA.
This endless document contains
information
from September of 2009 to February of 2010; it has exactly six months.
Malte, who couldn't process this amount of information, sent it to a weekly magazine which, in turn, contacted a data visualization agency to do something with it.
They took the data from Deutsche Telekom and Malte's public information, like, for example,
information
from his Twitter account or his blog.
And the worst thing is that this is only the data on Malte, but Malte is surrounded by people like us with mobiles like his that are producing the same information; and that company sees everything.
You could end up in Mexico, D.F., where the Zetas use their access to the
information
of phone companies to see who contacts the police and cut their heads.
The problem is that the very existence of that
information
makes us vulnerable in the ways that we can't anticipate right now.
Now if you were to step back and say, "What can we do with this information?"
There's so much
information
out there.
They say that the scope of human
information
is now doubling every 18 months or so, the sum total of human
information.
That means between now and late 2014, we will generate as much information, in terms of gigabytes, as all of humanity has in all the previous millenia put together.
On the one hand, we can choose between a new golden age where
information
is more universally available than it's ever been in human history, where we all have the answers to our questions at our fingertips.
For example, ship captains needed to know
information
about the tides in order to safely dock at ports.
We have just begun to try to figure out how do we take this very complex machine that does extraordinary kinds of
information
processing and use our own minds to understand this very complex brain that supports our own minds.
Well, when you stream a video onto your computer, that
information
is temporarily stored using electrons.
And as
information
becomes that light, it becomes a lot more democratic, meaning that more teachers and presenters and creators and viewers than ever before can be involved.
And then he said, "At that point, I was so brainwashed, I wasn't taking in any contradictory
information.
However, those computers can't input
information
into my nervous system.
If I were a cyborg and could feel my legs via small computers inputting
information
into my nervous system, it would fundamentally change, I believe, my relationship to my synthetic body.
When these muscles flex and extend, biological sensors within the muscle tendons send
information
through nerves to the brain.
Consequently, a standard artificial limb cannot feed back
information
into the nervous system about where the prosthesis is in space.
This muscle dynamic interaction causes biological sensors within the muscle tendon to send
information
through the nerve to the central nervous system, relating
information
on the muscle tendon's length, speed and force.
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