One
in sentence
100215 examples of One in a sentence
But we realized, of course, that we are dealing with cultural issues, and this is, I love this Klimt painting, because the more you look at it, the more you kind of get the whole issue that's going on here, which is clearly the separation of death from the living, and the fear — Like, if you actually look, there's
one
woman there who has her eyes open.
She's the
one
he's looking at, and [she's] the
one
he's coming for.
And I have
one
small idea, and
one
big idea about what could happen.
One
of them is, you can, just ask this simple question.
Sure." (Laughter) So that
one
didn't really run, but I was very struck by this.
Singapore is the best
one.
Because I have to show you
one
of the other facilities.
There is no
one
who has done it so far.
The Minister of the Environment of India said, "Well, you were the
one
who caused the problem."
This family earns about
one
dollar per day.
Although there is a sofa, if you watch in the kitchen, you can see that the great difference for women does not come between
one
to 10 dollars.
That's
one
context.
The women told us
one
thing.
Human rights is also important, but it just gets
one
cross.
But I want to talk about
one
program that Bill Atkinson wrote, called HyperCard.
This is my favorite
one.
Or, in this example, I'm building a simulated economy in which pixels are trading color with
one
another, trying to investigate how these types of systems work, and just kind of having fun.
We're in the middle of
one
of them right now.
The first one, I've been working on in conjunction with Mark Hansen.
And Mark came to the Times with a very interesting question to what may seem like an obvious problem: When people share content on the internet, how does that content get from person A to person B? Or maybe, person A to person B to person C to person D? We know that people share content in the internet, but what we don't know is what happens in that gap between
one
person to the other.
If we look at these systems that start with
one
event that leads to other events, we call that structure a cascade.
Now, the New York Times has a lot of people who share our content, so the cascades do not look like that one, they look more like this.
And then as people are sharing the content from
one
person to another, we go up in the Y axis, degrees of separation, and over on the X axis, for time.
So we're able to look at that conversation in a couple of different views: this one, which shows us the threads of conversation, and this one, which combines that stacked view with a view that lets us see the threads.
So it was important for us, when we were building this tool, to make it an exploratory one, so that people could dig through this vast terrain of data.
And maybe the dinosaur analogy is a good one, because we're actually making some probabilistic guesses about how these things link.
And my own story with September 11 has really become a more intricate one, because I spent a great deal of time working on a piece of the 9/11 Memorial in Manhattan.
And
one
of the most tremendously moving experiences is to go to the memorial and see how these people are placed next to each other, so that this memorial is representing their own lives.
So I'm not here today only to tell you how my team at MIT has drawn out of nature a solution to
one
of the world's great problems.
I recall the very moment
one
day when I was searching for a pair of metals that would meet the constraints of earth abundance, different, opposite density and high mutual reactivity.
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