Points
in sentence
3133 examples of Points in a sentence
What you can do is, the more you run, the more
points
you get, and we have an auction where you can buy Nike stuff but only by proving that you've actually used the product to do stuff."
And so these oral histories, which we've actually been capturing already for years, are then mixed together with interviews that we're doing with people like Donald Rumsfeld, Bill Clinton, Rudy Giuliani, and you mix together these different players and these different experiences, these different reflection
points
about 9/11.
And this was actually used by surgeons to see what they were doing with other instruments from different
points
of view, without caring that much about what was touched around.
In Tana Toraja, the most important social moments in people's lives, the focal
points
of social and cultural interaction are not weddings or births or even family dinners, but funerals.
I'm going to shove it into my bag, I'm going to have this email template, and I'm going to fill it out and collect information on all these different data
points
during the date to prove to everybody that empirically, these dates really are terrible.
So I started writing and writing and writing, and at the end, I had amassed 72 different data
points.
So I now have these 72 different data points, which, to be fair, is a lot.
I broke it into a top tier and a second tier of points, and I ranked everything starting at 100 and going all the way down to 91, and listing things like I was looking for somebody who was really smart, who would challenge and stimulate me, and balancing that with a second tier and a second set of
points.
I figured there would be a minimum of 700
points
before I would agree to email somebody or respond to an email message.
For 900 points, I'd agree to go out on a date, and I wouldn't even consider any kind of relationship before somebody had crossed the 1,500 point threshold.
Because remember, in my scoring system, they have to reach a minimum threshold of 700 points, and none of them have done that.
He looked and talked exactly like what I wanted, and immediately, he scored 850
points.
Long before a little thing called Twitter, radio brought us broadcasts and connected millions of people to single
points
of broadcast.
And from those single
points
emanated stories.
Every single one of these
points
is its own broadcaster.
Imagine a future in which strangers around you will look at you through their Google Glasses or, one day, their contact lenses, and use seven or eight data
points
about you to infer anything else which may be known about you.
On top of that, we selected some strategic
points
reminded of this idea of the gates and connecting them by straight lines, and this modified this initial pattern.
I started to prospect under the benches of bakeries and the entrances of pastry shops for plug
points.
But you simply do that by clicking on a few way
points
on the Google Maps interface using the open-source software.
Those missions could be as simple as just a few way points, or they could be slightly longer and more complicated, to fly along a river system.
This may explain a very sad fact: Set
points
can go up, but they rarely go down.
And I can't remember a specific day where we made a conscious decision that we were actually going to go out and build these things, but once we got that idea in our minds of the world as a dataset, of being able to capture millions of data
points
on a daily basis describing the global economy, of being able to unearth billions of connections between them that had never before been found, it just seemed boring to go work on anything else.
But we can, for instance, imagine a dating website which, a bit like those loyalty
points
programs, uses seduction capital
points
that vary according to my age, my height/weight ratio, my degree, my salary, or the number of clicks on my profile.
So most of the
points
that you see on the screen are not individual stars, but collections of stars, or galaxies.
Now, if the number of connections that we can make is proportional to the number of pairs of data points, a hundredfold multiplication in the quantity of data is a ten-thousandfold multiplication in the number of patterns that we can see in that data, this just in the last 10 or 11 years.
The computer's on the left, and it's just racking up
points.
Like, we've been thinking about this idea for five years or more before we started working on it, but it was just really, how do we get access
points
up high, cheaply?
You see a bunch of points, or nodes?
I did an analysis of the data, and found that a typical serif face you see on the left needed nearly twice as much data as a sans serif in the middle because of all the
points
required to define the elegantly curved serif brackets.
In 1988, she won the gold in the heptathlon and set a record of 7,291 points, a score that no athlete has come very close to since.
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