Systems
in sentence
4888 examples of Systems in a sentence
Can we get complex 3D structure automatically assembling in inorganic
systems?
Because there are some advantages to inorganic systems, like higher speed semiconductors, etc.
And so you can actually sort of almost double your boat speed with
systems
like that.
They had all sorts of different data formats, all sorts, all kinds of documentation
systems.
But fear is the central underlying underpinning of all of our response
systems.
People and
systems
count on our silence to keep us exactly where we are.
And the study showed that, compared to other buildings, there is a reduced incidence of eye irritation by 52 percent, respiratory
systems
by 34 percent, headaches by 24 percent, lung impairment by 12 percent and asthma by nine percent.
Then these two fellows came along, and they were flying kites to develop the control
systems
that would ultimately enable powered human flight.
And the real significant thing here is we're developing the control systems, as did the Wright brothers, that would enable sustained, long-duration flight.
Because when
systems
are broken, like the ones that we're seeing around the world, it's an opportunity for invention and for innovation.
We went in with zero unmanned ground
systems.
But it may be even bigger than that, because our unmanned
systems
don't just affect the "how" of war-fighting, they affect the "who" of fighting at its most fundamental level.
I've spent the last several years going around meeting with all the players in this field, from the robot scientists to the science fiction authors who inspired them to the 19-year-old drone pilots who are fighting from Nevada, to the four-star generals who command them, to even the Iraqi insurgents who they are targeting and what they think about our systems, and what I found interesting is not just their stories, but how their experiences point to these ripple effects that are going outwards in our society, in our law and our ethics, etc.
One of the people that I met with was a former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Ronald Reagan, and he put it this way: "I like these
systems
because they save American lives, but I worry about more marketization of wars, more shock-and-awe talk, to defray discussion of the costs.
This is not even talking about armed, autonomous
systems
with full authority to use force.
So again, we think bacteria invented that, and you've just evolved a few more bells and whistles, but all of the ideas are in these simple
systems
that we can study.
So we've targeted those
systems
to make the molecules work better.
You see, public
systems
have always been governed through internal mechanisms, like review meetings.
Broken
systems
certainly need more resources and tools.
In fact, this approach of using the citizen to trigger motivation is not even limited to public health
systems.
There are many broken
systems
out there in the world.
We need multiple independent
systems.
The web, mobile devices, virtual and augmented reality were rescripting our nervous
systems.
We need agile data
systems
that put science in the hands of communities to optimize conservation to the target species or habitat.
Nonetheless, solar storms can still be responsible for disrupting satellite telecommunications and operations, for disrupting navigation systems, such as GPS, as well as electric power transmission.
They've created parallel, fascist-style legal
systems
in which migrants have none of the rights that form the basis of a democracy, the alleged foundation of the countries in which they're seeking refuge.
The dystopian immigration
systems
being built up in first-world countries are a test of citizens to see how far you're willing to let the government go in taking away other people's rights when you think it won't happen to you.
For nearly a decade, my collaborators and I at the Self-Assembly Lab have been working on material
systems
that transform themselves, assemble themselves and adapt to their environment.
It's part of a lifelong fascination about the dynamics of individuals and
systems
and all the messiness that that entails.
And I was excited, because it led me to the realization that maybe part of the beauty of human and machine
systems
is their shared inherent fallibility.
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