Space
in sentence
4234 examples of Space in a sentence
CA: I mean, SpaceX has made the regular reusability of rockets seem almost routine, which means you've done something that no national
space
program, for example, has been able to achieve.
CA: How much of a worry is it, and how much of a drag on the planning is it, are concerns just about
space
junk?
Basically, the width, the diameter of the fairing is eight meters, so you can think about what giant telescopes you can put in that fairing, in that cargo bay, and see really incredible things and discover incredible things in
space.
GS: So it currently is on earth, but this is basically
space
travel for earthlings.
CA: So how many passengers can possibly afford the fortune of flying by
space?
So you have this odd sort of paradox where I'm happy for him to go into this
space
if I know who everybody else is, but I don't want anybody else to know who he is.
Well, what we tend to do about it is we think about Orwell
space.
It was first excavated in 1961 as they were building LAX, although scientists believe that it dates back to the year 2000 Before Common Era, when it was used as a busy transdimensional
space
port by the ancient astronauts who first colonized this planet and raised our species from savagery by giving us the gift of written language and technology and the gift of revolving restaurants.
It is thought to have been a replacement for the older
space
ports located, of course, at Stonehenge and considered to be quite an improvement due to the uncluttered design, the lack of druids hanging around all the time and obviously, the much better access to parking.
And despite its obvious influence by the ancient astronauts and its
space
agey-ness and tripodism, it is not something designed to attach to your brain and suck out your thoughts.
You would do something, because it's literally impossible to penetrate somebody's physical
space
and not get that reaction.
Even in stories on gender-based violence, men get an overwhelming majority of print
space
and airtime.
We wanted to create an outdoor
space
which is so comfortable that people can go there in the early afternoon, even in these sunny and hot summer months, and they can enjoy and meet there with their families.
As a kid, I was fascinated with all things air and
space.
It was an astronomy book, and I poured over that thing for hours on end, and it was a combination of all these things that inspired me to pursue
space
exploration as my own personal dream, and part of that dream was, I always wanted to just fly around the solar system and visit different planets and visit moons and spacecraft.
These are a number of our science
space
Earth orbiters.
And I mention this because there's this strange public perception that NASA's dead, that the
space
shuttles stopped flying and all of the sudden there's no more spacecraft out there.
It's just the vastness of
space
makes it look like nothing's happening.
And my personal dream is for kids to take this and explore and see the wonders out there and be inspired, as I was as a kid, to pursue STEM education and to pursue a dream in
space
exploration.
In between those two landmarks in Ham's life, he flew into
space.
Years later, the boy from that cramped mud hut would grow up to be the man in that cramped capsule on the tip of a rocket who volunteered to be launched into outer space, the first one of any of us to really physically leave this planet.
And that
space
is like the personal computer in 1976, like the Apples with the other companies are fighting, and we will see in a few years, there will be the Apple of this kind of market come out.
It's a satellite that goes into space, which is probably the least open-source thing you can imagine, and it contains an Arduino connected to a bunch of sensors.
So imagine, if you as a high school can have the satellite for a week and do satellite
space
experiments like that.
All of the physical objects in our
space
are being transformed into information technologies, and that has a radical implication for our security, because more connections to more devices means more vulnerabilities.
If we all do our part, I think we'll be in a much better
space.
So I made a more interactive version, and the way I did that is I used their position in time in the lecture to place these stars into 3D space, and with some custom software and a Kinect, I can walk right into the lecture.
It's an open-source GPS jammer, developed by Limor Fried, a graduate student at MIT, and Limor calls it "a tool for reclaiming our personal space."
Its jamming signals don't stop at the edge of your personal
space
or at the edge of your car.
But what I was amazed about is this reverse engineering and know-how that's built into this little two meters of
space.
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