Infrastructure
in sentence
4036 examples of Infrastructure in a sentence
Along the way, though, I started examining my city, its culture, its infrastructure, trying to figure out why our specific city seemed to have a problem with obesity.
It was time to push what I called MAPS 3. Now MAPS 3, like the other two programs, had had an economic development motive behind it, but along with the traditional economic development tasks like building a new convention center, we added some health-related
infrastructure
to the process.
But now we've narrowed the streets, highly landscaped them, making them more pedestrian-friendly, really a redesign, rethinking the way we build our infrastructure, designing a city around people and not cars.
In the U.S. alone, there's more than four million miles of roads, very expensive to build, very expensive to maintain infrastructure, with a huge ecological footprint, and yet, very often, congested.
Compare this to normal
infrastructure
investments.
It's decentralized, it's peer-to-peer, it's bidirectional, highly adaptable, with very low
infrastructure
investment, very low ecological footprint.
These are places that do have road infrastructure, but it's very inefficient.
In terms of transport infrastructure, what really makes a difference between advanced and backward cities is not highways or subways but quality sidewalks.
But you see, when a city is only being created, it's very easy to incorporate this kind of
infrastructure.
We are beginning to deploy throughout the industrial system embedded virtualization, multi-core processor technology, advanced cloud-based communications, a new software-defined machine
infrastructure
which allows machine functionality to become virtualized in software, decoupling machine software from hardware, and allowing us to remotely and automatically monitor, manage and upgrade industrial assets.
We will need a robust cybersecurity approach that protects sensitive information and intellectual property and safeguards critical
infrastructure
from cyberattacks.
Nine years ago, I worked for the U.S. government in Iraq, helping rebuild the electricity
infrastructure.
It brings rudimentary banking services to places where there's no banking
infrastructure.
And even if they could have access to the banking infrastructure, they wouldn't necessarily be considered viable customers, because they're not wealthy enough to have bank accounts.
Even the
infrastructure
has to change.
So many stories emerge from these dynamics of alteration of space, such as "the informal Buddha," which tells the story of a small house that saved itself, it did not travel to Mexico, but it was retrofitted in the end into a Buddhist temple, and in so doing, this small house transforms or mutates from a singular dwelling into a small, or a micro, socioeconomic and cultural
infrastructure
inside a neighborhood.
And I'm thinking of how these modest alterations with space and with policy in many cities in the world, in primarily the urgency of a collective imagination as these communities reimagine their own forms of governance, social organization, and infrastructure, really is at the center of the new formation of democratic politics of the urban.
And we need industry structures that will accommodate very, very different motivations, from the amateur motivations of people in communities to maybe the social motivations of
infrastructure
built by governments, or, for that matter, cooperative institutions built by companies that are otherwise competing, because that is the only way that they can get to scale.
["Immune to any protection system Hidden collection
infrastructure"
] Deployed all over your country.
If breadwinning and caregiving are really equal, then why shouldn't a government invest as much in an
infrastructure
of care as the foundation of a healthy society as it invests in physical
infrastructure
as the backbone of a successful economy?
Those governments invest in that
infrastructure
the same way they invest in roads and bridges and tunnels and trains.
Now, the central authorities have spent heavily on network
infrastructure
over the years, creating an attractive environment for investment.
And the reason that I believe they're named this way is because they target our own
infrastructure.
We haven't invested nearly as much in the physical
infrastructure
to ensure that that happens.
We need you to help us imagine how to invest in the services and products and
infrastructure
that will support our dignity, our independence and our well-being in these many, many decades that we're going to live.
Barack Obama: To help families refinance their homes, to invest in things like high-tech manufacturing, clean energy and the
infrastructure
that creates good new jobs.
They found European service providers that still had 20-year-old analog dial-up access
infrastructure.
They control our nation's entire
infrastructure.
It requires effort and investment, which is why all highly prosperous capitalist democracies are characterized by massive investments in the middle class and the
infrastructure
that they depend on.
Programs like a reasonable minimum wage, affordable healthcare, paid sick leave, and the progressive taxation necessary to pay for the important
infrastructure
necessary for the middle class like education, R and D, these are indispensable tools shrewd capitalists should embrace to drive growth, because no one benefits from it like us.
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