Space
in sentence
4234 examples of Space in a sentence
OK, the title of this presentation is "Connections and Consequences," and it's really a kind of summary of five years of trying to figure out what it's going to be like when everyone on the planet has the ability to transcend
space
and time in a personal and convenient manner, right?
In my lab, we develop tools to travel not only in
space
but also through time.
If we want to build something like Google Maps of the past, or Facebook of the past, we need to enlarge this space, we need to make that like a rectangle.
And then what you can do is put that in space, because much of this information is spatial.
But today I want to focus on this concept of composition for physical
space.
Hundreds of these brightly-colored sculptures decorated the park for a number of weeks, and unlike work that's exhibited in a more neutral space, like on the walls of a gallery or a museum, this was work that was really in dialogue with this place, and in a lot of ways, The Gates was really a celebration of Frederick Olmsted's incredible design.
We have enough
space
in the tent."
What we need in this
space
are strong data and analytics.
During this period, launching things into space, just the rocket to get the satellite up there, has cost hundreds of millions of dollars each, and that's created tremendous pressure to launch things infrequently and to make sure that when you do, you cram as much functionality in there as possible.
In the late 1990s, a couple of professors proposed a concept for radically reducing the price of putting things in
space.
In space, size drives cost, and we had worked with these very small, breadbox-sized satellites in school, but as we began to better understand the laws of physics, we found that the quality of pictures those satellites could take was very limited, because the laws of physics dictate that the best picture you can take through a telescope is a function of the diameter of that telescope, and these satellites had a very small, very constrained volume.
For a data scientist that just happened to go to
space
camp as a kid, it just doesn't get much better than that.
Now, suppose that
space
aliens arrived.
So many stories emerge from these dynamics of alteration of space, such as "the informal Buddha," which tells the story of a small house that saved itself, it did not travel to Mexico, but it was retrofitted in the end into a Buddhist temple, and in so doing, this small house transforms or mutates from a singular dwelling into a small, or a micro, socioeconomic and cultural infrastructure inside a neighborhood.
This is a story of a group of teenagers that one night, a few months ago, decided to invade this
space
under the freeway to begin constructing their own skateboard park.
The first thing they did was to recognize the specificity of political jurisdiction inscribed in that empty
space.
All these red lines are the invisible political institutions that were inscribed in that leftover empty
space.
And they began to realize the necessity to organize themselves even deeper and began to fundraise, to organize budgets, to really be aware of all the knowledge embedded in the urban code in San Diego so that they could begin to redefine the very meaning of public
space
in the city, expanding it to other categories.
For me as an architect, it has become a fundamental narrative, because it begins to teach me that this micro-community not only designed another category of public
space
but they also designed the socioeconomic protocols that were necessary to be inscribed in that
space
for its long-term sustainability.
And I'm thinking of how these modest alterations with
space
and with policy in many cities in the world, in primarily the urgency of a collective imagination as these communities reimagine their own forms of governance, social organization, and infrastructure, really is at the center of the new formation of democratic politics of the urban.
So a viewer enters the space, and they snap to attention.
And after a while, if the viewer continues to remain in the space, the panels will sort of become immune to the presence of the viewer and become lax and autonomous again, until they sort of sense a presence in the room or a movement, when they will again snap to attention.
Because we are always working from a very personal space, we like how this consumer aesthetic sort of depersonalizes the object and gives us a bit of distance in its appearance, at least.
Just as some animals can use objects in their environments as tools to reach into narrow spaces, here we see that Entropica, again on its own initiative, was able to move a large disk representing an animal around so as to cause a small disk, representing a tool, to reach into a confined
space
holding a third disk and release the third disk from its initially fixed position.
And the answer is, the ability to seek goals will follow directly from this in the following sense: just like you would travel through a tunnel, a bottleneck in your future path space, in order to achieve many other diverse objectives later on, or just like you would invest in a financial security, reducing your short-term liquidity in order to increase your wealth over the long term, goal seeking emerges directly from a long-term drive to increase future freedom of action.
Visible from space, the Okavango Delta is Africa's largest remaining intact wetland wilderness.
We are the sixth extinction because we left no safe
space
for millions of species to sustainably coexist.
We urgently need to create safe
space
for these wild animals.
Maxwell's equations are of course symmetrical under rotations of all of
space.
You see above, at the top, a long list of equations with three components for the three directions of space: x, y and z.
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