Machines
in sentence
1115 examples of Machines in a sentence
So when this machine breaks, the
machines
that they have to work with break, they've got to try and figure it out, but most of the time, that's the end of the road.
Those
machines
go the proverbial junkyard.
So it seems crazy, but the model that we have right now is taking those
machines
that were designed for that first environment that I showed you and donating or selling them to hospitals in this environment.
He took a walk down the hall to where they threw all those
machines
that had just crapped out on them, I think that's the scientific term, and he started tinkering.
Instead, what I do and what the designers at Thinking
Machines
do is we think at some level of abstraction and then we hand it to the machine and the machine takes it beyond what we could ever do, much farther and faster than we could ever do.
Now we do the same with drills and
machines.
There's several other notable attacks that unfortunately I don't have time to go into, but the one that I wanted to point out was a group from the University of Michigan which was able to take voting machines, the Sequoia AVC Edge DREs that were going to be used in New Jersey in the election that were left in a hallway, and put Pac-Man on it.
We have
machines
that go ping.
In 1895, Lord Kelvin declared that heavier-than-air flying
machines
were impossible.
And it's not just passive structures, it's entire
machines.
And if we can build
machines
at that scale, what about Eiffel Tower-like trusses at the microscale?
Now Edward de Bono argued that our brains are pattern matching
machines.
And the feeling that no one is listening to me make us want to spend time with
machines
that seem to care about us.
We started by organizing image acquisition from magnetic resonance and CT imaging machines, from which to make a model of the patient's aorta.
He was in the hospital looking at one of his MRI
machines
in use, when he saw a young family, and this little girl.
Robots are the most human of our
machines.
I invite all of you to think about the innovations that you're interested in, the
machines
that you wish for.
But these
machines
that power the inside of the cells are really quite amazing, and they really are the basis of all life because all of these
machines
interact with each other.
In fact, it would really, in the absence of these machines, have made the attendance here, Chris, really quite sparse.
So this idea that you can manufacture objects digitally using these
machines
is something that The Economist magazine defined as the Third Industrial Revolution.
Then what we want to do is create six-meter versions so we can test the maximum performance of these machines, so we can go at very, very high speed.
We hope that we can sometime clean up oil spills, or we can gather or collect plastic in the ocean, or we can have swarms of our
machines
controlled by multi-player video game engines to control many of these machines, to monitor coral reefs or to monitor fisheries.
He was a very wealthy man, and a sort of, part of the aristocracy of Britain, and on a Saturday night in Marylebone, were you part of the intelligentsia of that period, you would have been invited round to his house for a soiree — and he invited everybody: kings, the Duke of Wellington, many, many famous people — and he would have shown you one of his mechanical
machines.
Machines
are getting faster, it's getting less expensive, and there's some promising technological developments just on the horizon.
Thanks to the universal penetration of running water and electricity in the developed world and the widespread adoption of washing machines, vacuum cleaners, refrigerators, dishwashers, stoves and microwaves, the amount of our lives that we forfeit to housework has fallen from 60 hours a week to fewer than 15 hours a week.
Since then, I've carved out this little niche for myself on the internet as an inventor of useless machines, because as we all know, the easiest way to be at the top of your field is to choose a very small field.
I know that about half of you in the audience are probably like, "Building useless
machines
is really fun, but how is this in any way or form a business?"
So as much as my
machines
can seem like simple engineering slapstick, I realize that I stumbled on something bigger than that.
This is an astonishing result: average men, average
machines
beating the best man, the best machine.
Humans, using technology, testing hypotheses, searching for insight by asking
machines
to do things for them.
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