Projects
in sentence
2702 examples of Projects in a sentence
But why were all these
projects
so innovative?
And there are some incremental
projects
in my country, and I am the first one to celebrate them.
And today, on the Ethereum blockchain, there are
projects
underway to do everything from create a new replacement for the stock market to create a new model of democracy, where politicians are accountable to citizens.
They did this through networks of popular committees, and their use of direct action and communal self-help
projects
challenged Israel's very ability to continue ruling the West Bank and Gaza.
There are 20 of these projects, and they are remarkable in their beauty and their diversity, and they are changing people.
Whether it's training for a marathon, picking up an old hobby, or learning a new skill, for most people, self-transformation
projects
occupy a very positive emotional space.
He was at the top of his dental school class, and alongside Yusor and Razan, was involved in local and international community service
projects
dedicated to the homeless and refugees, including a dental relief trip they were planning for Syrian refugees in Turkey.
Razan, at just 19, used her creativity as an architectural engineering student to serve those around her, making care packages for the local homeless, among other
projects.
I design engineering
projects
for middle school and high school students, often using materials that are pretty unexpected.
So before Flappy Bird Box, I had the idea of using creative engineering
projects
to teach students.
So because of the success of this project, I continued to create more engineering
projects
to challenge my students.
Perhaps one solution could be to introduce technology to students through creative
projects.
Most students think that it's boring or unwelcoming, so I have always designed
projects
following three principles.
Whether here in New York or in Houston or Miami, Detroit, Philadelphia, Seoul, Hong Kong, Singapore, Toronto and Paris, cities big and small all over the world are reclaiming and reinventing this infrastructure for themselves, including the mother of all catalyst infrastructure projects, the Los Angeles River, the revitalization effort for which similarly started as a grassroots movement, has developed into a cultural momentum, and is now in the early stages of being transformed into some kind of life-affirming infrastructure again, this one with trails and parks and fishing and boating and community revitalization, and of course, water quality and flood control.
But our history of sprawl, and from what we can already see with these catalyst
projects
today, we know and must remember that big changes like this don't usually benefit everyone.
Business owners create new sources of income for themselves, new jobs get added into the economy and then more taxes are paid to fund public
projects.
And they would give the
projects
code names, you know, mostly from "Star Wars," actually: things like C3PO, Yoda, Luke.
And so the first
projects
were sort of humble, but they took technology and maybe made it into things that people would use in a new way, and maybe finding some new functionality.
And other projects, which were really about transformation, about matching the human need.
So, all of these
projects
have a humanistic sense to them, and I think as designers we need to really think about how we can create a different relationship between our work and the world, whether it's for business, or, as I'm going to show, on some civic-type
projects.
Because I think everybody agrees that as designers we bring value to business, value to the users also, but I think it's the values that we put into these
projects
that ultimately create the greater value.
The
projects
I'm going to show you today use the idea of building relationships as the key driver for design.
But besides romantic relationships, the building has a positive social effect on the community, as evidenced by people starting groups together and starting big
projects
together, like this organic community garden on the building's roof terrace.
Or we can ask for feedback-oriented meetings as
projects
progress.
And through these projects, I'm asking questions like, how do we define nature?
Well, when I'm not fighting the coded gaze as a poet of code, I'm a graduate student at the MIT Media Lab, and there I have the opportunity to work on all sorts of whimsical projects, including the Aspire Mirror, a project I did so I could project digital masks onto my reflection.
But big
projects
like the Event Horizon Telescope are successful due to all the interdisciplinary expertise different people bring to the table.
So it was so satisfying going to these little openings despite the fact that I was kind of largely ignored or humiliated, but it was actually fun going to the openings, so I decided that I wanted to get the people in my office who had worked on these projects, get the illustrators and photographers, and I said, why don't we rent a van and drive around the five boroughs of New York and see how many we could hit at one time.
And so at this point in time, you might be thinking, "OK, what is the real, real upside of not micromanaging?" and it's this: I didn't do any of these
projects.
In fact, in one study I read, 25 percent of technology
projects
are canceled or deliver things that are never used.
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