Projects
in sentence
2702 examples of Projects in a sentence
Development institutions today are also opening for public scrutiny the
projects
they finance.
In this manner, the World Bank has now GeoMapped 30,000 project activities in 143 countries, and donors are using a common platform to map all their
projects.
I'm going to share with you two
projects
that are investigations along these lines, and we'll start with this one.
In a year, I had 27
projects
going on, and the government came to see me to say, "How can you do that?
And I get the most amazing fan mail, and I get the most amazing projects, and the biggest moment for me came last Halloween.
So over the last several years, kids around the world ages 8 and up, have shared their projects, and I thought, I wonder if, of those three million projects, whether anyone else has thought to put up Mother's Day cards.
So I really enjoyed looking at these
projects
and interacting with these
projects.
In fact, I liked it so much that, instead of making my own project, I sent my mom links to about a dozen of these
projects.
Of the millions of
projects
on the Scratch website, there's everything from animated stories to school science
projects
to anime soap operas to virtual construction kits to recreations of classic video games to political opinion polls to trigonometry tutorials to interactive artwork, and, yes, interactive Mother's Day cards.
(Crickets chirping) (Shouts) (Chomping) (Laughter) (Applause) As kids are creating
projects
like this, they're learning to code, but even more importantly, they're coding to learn.
So as kids like Victor are creating
projects
like this, they're learning important concepts like variables, but that's just the start.
So he was learning many different core principles of design, about how to experiment with new ideas, how to take complex ideas and break them down into simpler parts, how to collaborate with other people on your projects, about how to find and fix bugs when things go wrong, how to keep persistent and to persevere in the face of frustrations when things aren't working well.
I worked a lot of weekends, and I found myself never having time for all the
projects
that I wanted to work on on my own.
And one day I was at work and I saw a talk by Stefan Sagmeister on TED, and it was called "The power of time off," and he spoke about how every seven years, he takes a year off from work so he could do his own creative projects, and I was instantly inspired, and I just said, "I have to do that.
So the first of those
projects
ended up being something I called "One Second Every Day." Basically I'm recording one second of every day of my life for the rest of my life, chronologically compiling these one-second tiny slices of my life into one single continuous video until, you know, I can't record them anymore.
And some of the largest
projects
in the country were being constructed through government-to-government arrangements with some of the leading countries in the world, the United States and Britain and France and so on and so on.
Eighty-three percent of
projects
failed.
In Sutherland's system, companies don't use large, massive
projects
that take two years.
So now I'm going to show you a number of
projects
that we've built, from one-dimensional, two-dimensional, three-dimensional and even four-dimensional systems.
We made a lot of trips, financed development, economic
projects
in Africa with the World Bank.
I mean, all the
projects
which have, in some way, been inspired by that agenda are about a celebratory lifestyle, in a way celebrating the places and the spaces which determine the quality of life.
And it's a number of
projects.
Now, every week, we have the equivalent of 84 million disks, which record our archival information on past, current and future
projects.
And after about 45 minutes, you get really intricate
projects
like leaves sorted by hue, so you get a color fade and put in a circle like a wreath.
There were times when my
projects
failed to get off the ground, or, even worse, after spending tons of time on them the end image was kind of embarrassing.
Actually, we've got ourselves locked into this Industrial Era mindset which says that the only people who can make cities are large organizations or corporations who build on our behalf, procuring whole neighborhoods in single, monolithic projects, and of course, form follows finance.
We had AirDynamisis, who, like I, did not want to work for aerospace companies on some big, many year project, and so we did our small projects, and the company slowly grew.
And that project continued, did succeed, and we then got into other
projects
in aviation and mechanical things and ground devices.
This guy had been lead compositor on such films as "Avatar" and "Star Trek" and "Transformers," and other unknown
projects
like this, and I knew he was the perfect fit for the job, and I had to convince him, and, instead of working on the next Spielberg movie, he accepted to work on mine.
And you might end up doing some crazy projects, and who knows, you might even end up going to Mars.
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