Point
in sentence
12191 examples of Point in a sentence
So I got to a
point
when I was able to perceive 360 colors, just like human vision.
I gave a talk like this in London a while back about this
point.
It's a perfect image for the fundamental
point
that no one of us is as smart as all of us thinking together.
This is a tipping
point.
So wouldn't it be amazing if our phones could see the world in the same way that we do, as we're walking around being able to
point
a phone at anything, and then have it actually recognize images and objects like the human brain, and then be able to pull in information from an almost infinite library of knowledge and experiences and ideas.
Now what we can do is
point
at the front of the newspaper and immediately get the bulletin.
We have people who have, for example, taken the inside of the engine bay of an old car and tagged up different components within an engine, so that if you're stuck and you want to find out more, you can
point
and discover the information.
So, I'm told we're ready, which means we can now
point
at the image, and there you all are.
So he designed a plotter as well, and, you know, at that point, I think he got pretty much a pretty good machine.
At one
point
I simply wanted to jump inside this image, so to say, I bought these red and blue 3D glasses, got up very close to the screen, but still that wasn't the same as being able to walk around and touch things.
And, if I may add, at one
point
we will build them.
At a certain
point
in time, in 1969, things were really bad.
And this way, we know the distances, of course to the door, but also to the hidden objects, but we don't know which
point
corresponds to which distance.
Now, I do need to
point
out, Donovan is not wrong, OK?
It's really beautiful, and it conjures up all these various different emotions, but he couldn't photograph everything, and to tell the story, I had to fill in the gaps, which is now rather daunting, because now I have to recreate back to back what really happened and I had, I'm the only one who could really blow it at that
point.
RL: So, what I did is basically I had another screening room experience where I was basically tracking where I was looking, or where we were looking, and of course you're looking at the two people on the bow of the ship, and then at some point, I'm changing the periphery of the shot, I'm changing, it's becoming the rusted wreck, and then I would run it every day, and then I would find exactly the moment that I stopped looking at them and start noticing the rest of it, and the moment my eye shifted, we just marked it to the frame.
Anyway, but I guess my
point
is that all of these enterprises are engaging to me in their multiplicity, but as I've presented them to you today, they're actually solitary enterprises, and so pretty soon I want to commune with other people, and so I'm delighted that in fact I get to compose works for them.
I think the technicities of creativity can be taught and shared, and I think you can find out things about your own personal physical signature, your own cognitive habits, and use that as a
point
of departure to misbehave beautifully.
And here's another point: scientists must be free to fail, because even a failed hypothesis teaches us something.
The
point
is, scientists must be free to choose what they want to explore, what they are passionate about and they must be free to report their findings.
And in that advice was, "Do not talk to the street kids, at no
point
leave your baggage unattended and in all counts, do not go swimming."
I know that the people I've recorded have gotten me to this
point.
And as an example, I want to give you Amos, a male that I knew who was a young male and he was alpha male, he was very popular, but he got sick and he lost his position because, you know, chimpanzee males they can spot from a mile away if you are weak and they went for him, and he lost his position, and then he got sicker and sicker until at some
point
we had to isolate him.
Now, it wasn't until this
point
that I realized that these photos were such a huge part of the personal loss these people had felt.
Conventional wisdom held that everything was safe up to a point, a threshold.
But he kept worrying about it, and he worried about it so much that he got to the
point
where he thought the only thing he could do was leave a job he loved.
And I wanted to share that image with you of what I saw at that
point.
Sure, the physics changes, but if you wanted to know about the path of the Earth around the Sun, Einstein could write you an equation telling you where both objects are at any
point
in time.
Well, just seven years before Einstein's death, an American scientist called Warren Weaver made exactly this
point.
And this will continue to happen until local residents and police ramp up the security, at which point, the burglars will move off elsewhere.
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