Makes
in sentence
10985 examples of Makes in a sentence
The reason why this happens is because Malte has a mobile in his pocket that every five minutes
makes
a "ping" to the closest antenna and tells it, "Do you have something for me?
The problem is that the very existence of that information
makes
us vulnerable in the ways that we can't anticipate right now.
And the indicator box
makes
the lights flash.
In this case, the equilibrium
makes
a very bold prediction, which is everyone wants to be below everyone else, therefore they'll play zero.
It blocks the right too, as it
makes
principled arguments of the right increasingly impossible.
And the Ig Nobel Prize — (Laughter) (Applause) — the Ig Nobel Prize honors research that first
makes
people laugh, and then
makes
them think, with the ultimate goal to make more people interested in science.
It's not the Terminator's gun sight; it's a little line coming closer and closer to the thing you can do, the only thing that
makes
you special, the thing you're best at.
So it
makes
me wonder what the economic effects of this might be.
We can live in a world where our brains, the things that we know, continue to be the thing that
makes
us special, or a world in which we've outsourced all of that to evil supercomputers from the future like Watson.
And what
makes
the story especially unique is that we have learned how to help African-American students, Latino students, students from low-income backgrounds, to become some of the best in the world in science and engineering.
But equally important, it takes an understanding that it's hard work that
makes
the difference.
Every foundation
makes
the difference in the next level.
And so to feel that sense of responsibility
makes
all the difference in the world.
In a sense, it actually
makes
you feel that when you're in the safe zone of studying behavior or cognition, something you can observe, that in a way feels more simplistic and reductionistic than trying to engage this very complex, mysterious organ that we're beginning to try to understand.
I wished to tell him that what
makes
most of us who we are most of all is not our minds and not our bodies and not what happens to us, but how we respond to what happens to us.
You're the guy that
makes
eye candy."
It turns out that often the bad guys are good at exploiting the internet, not because they're some kind of technological geniuses, but because they understand what
makes
people tick.
Online abuse has been this perverse art of figuring out what
makes
people angry, what
makes
people afraid, what
makes
people insecure, and then pushing those pressure points until they're silenced.
Machine learning isn't perfect, and it still
makes
plenty of mistakes.
And then that's a heat exchanger to what
makes
this design really, really interesting, and that's a heat exchanger to a gas.
This is the thermodynamic cycle that produces electricity, and this
makes
this almost 50 percent efficient, between 45 and 50 percent efficiency.
You know, I always wonder, who
makes
up those rules?
In this talk today, I want to present a different idea for why investing in early childhood education
makes
sense as a public investment.
He
makes
an additional indictment of our strong ties when he says that these people who are so close to us, these strong ties in our lives, actually have a homogenizing effect on us.
It simply
makes
the point that we need to disrupt our zones of familiarity.
And that might seem surprising, because a lot of people think, "Philosophy is remote from the real world; economics, we're told, just
makes
us more selfish, and we know that math is for nerds."
But in truth, what I really would like to explain to the public and to the audiences of MoMA is that the most interesting chairs are the ones that are actually made by a robot, like this beautiful chair by Dirk Vander Kooij, where a robot deposits a toothpaste-like slur of recycled refrigerator parts, as if he were a big candy, and
makes
a chair out of it.
That's what
makes
this acquisition more than a little game or a little joke.
We live today, as you know very well, not in the digital, not in the physical, but in the kind of minestrone that our mind
makes
of the two.
So it's an acquisition where MoMA
makes
an arrangement with an airline and keeps the Boeing 747 flying.
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