Systems
in sentence
4888 examples of Systems in a sentence
They say hey, we need to work with you to secure your systems, but in reality, they're giving bad advice to these companies that makes them degrade the security of their services.
The other one is the Information Assurance mission, which is to protect the national security
systems
of the United States, and by that, that's things like the communications that the president uses, the communications that control our nuclear weapons, the communications that our military uses around the world, and the communications that we use with our allies, and that some of our allies themselves use.
CR: So talking about the future, what is it about you and transportation
systems?
I did some research on how much it cost, and I just became a bit obsessed with transportation
systems.
Ladies and gentlemen, this plight of millions of women could be changed if we think differently, if women and men think differently, if men and women in the tribal and patriarchal societies in the developing countries, if they can break a few norms of family and society, if they can abolish the discriminatory laws of the
systems
in their states, which go against the basic human rights of the women.
The various needs of personal navigation systems, in-car navigation systems, and web-based maps address this.
MG: But you change
systems.
When you compress it, it tends to go a little bit crooked like that, so you need the timing of the piston to be very good, and for that we use several control systems, which was not possible in 1970, but we now can do that with nice, new electronics.
Nature uses self-organizing
systems.
He said, "Take a black wetsuit, band it in yellow stripes like a bumblebee, and you'll be mimicking the warning
systems
of most marine species."
It's 10 by 10 by 30 centimeters, it weighs four kilograms, and we've stuffed the latest and greatest electronics and sensor
systems
into this little package so that even though this is really small, this can take pictures 10 times the resolution of the big satellite here, even though it weighs one thousandth of the mass.
These are things like Wi-Fi or cellular systems, and I did a lot of work in that domain.
I've recently realized that ants are using interactions differently in different environments, and that got me thinking that we could learn from this about other systems, like brains and data networks that we engineer, and even cancer.
So what all these
systems
have in common is that there's no central control.
So in an ant colony, there's no one in charge, and all
systems
like this without central control are regulated using very simple interactions.
So another environmental challenge that all
systems
have to deal with is resources, finding and collecting them.
So ants are using interactions in different ways in a huge variety of environments, and we could learn from this about other
systems
that operate without central control.
Amy Smith: Some of the other things we're working on are ways to do low-cost water quality testing, so that communities can maintain their own water systems, know when they're working, know when they treat them, etc.
We're also looking at low-cost water-treatment
systems.
The other reason is that in the last five years, there have been awesome tools, things about network biology,
systems
biology, that have come up that allow us to think that maybe we could decipher those positive outliers.
The basic building blocks of life aren't unique to Earth: amino acids have been found in comets, complex organic molecules in interstellar dust clouds, water in exoplanetary
systems.
Robust
systems
are stable in complex and new environments.
Robust
systems
can perform multiple tasks with the same structure.
Robust
systems
are also fault tolerant and fail-safe.
Robust
systems
are also damage resistant.
I am a computer science and engineering professor here at Carnegie Mellon, and my research focuses on usable privacy and security, and so my friends like to give me examples of their frustrations with computing systems, especially frustrations related to unusable privacy and security.
But what do you do when you have accounts on a hundred different
systems
and you're supposed to have a unique password for each of these
systems?
But I got curious, and I decided to go talk to the people in charge of our computer
systems
and find out what led them to introduce this new policy, and they said that the university had joined a consortium of universities, and one of the requirements of membership was that we had to have stronger passwords that complied with some new requirements, and these requirements were that our passwords had to have a lot of entropy.
With your money, you can support organizations that focus on these risks, like the Nuclear Threat Initiative, which campaigns to take nuclear weapons off hair-trigger alert, or the Blue Ribbon Panel, which develops policy to minimize the damage from natural and man-made pandemics, or the Center for Human-Compatible AI, which does technical research to ensure that AI
systems
are safe and reliable.
Now, ChucK is a programming language for music, and it's open-source, it's freely available, and I like to think that it crashes equally well on all modern operating
systems.
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