Technologies
in sentence
3116 examples of Technologies in a sentence
Absolutely, I believe that these
technologies
are scientifically useful right now, and that's why we're using them in multiple parts of our work at NASA.
At this event, we spoke about the different
technologies
directed at cancer.
These elements have a huge range of magnetic, phosphorescent, and conductive properties that make them crucial to modern
technologies.
Not in the sense of painting and sculpture, but in the sense of assisted reproductive
technologies.
So what are assisted reproductive
technologies?
Assisted reproductive
technologies
are things like in vitro fertilization.
And as you apply these technologies, you can even turn human beings into chimeras.
We began to see that clean technologies, in particular renewable energy technologies, began to drop price and increase in capacity, to the point where today we are already building concentrated solar power plants that have the capacity to power entire cities, to say nothing of the fact of what we are doing on mobility and intelligent buildings.
And with this shift in technologies, we were able to begin to understand that there was a shift in the economic equation, because we were able to recognize that yes, there are huge costs to climate change, and yes, there are compounded risks.
But there also are economic advantages and intrinsic benefits, because the dissemination of the clean
technologies
is going to bring us cleaner air, better health, better transportation, more livable cities, more energy security, more energy access to the developing world.
Now, some of my favorite examples of this are in Africa, where a new generation of designers are developing incredible Internet of Things
technologies
to fulfill Florence Nightingale's dream of improving healthcare in countries where more people now have access to cell phones than to clean, running water.
But even with the best tools and
technologies
that we have today, some tumors can't be detected until 10 years after they've started growing, when they are 50 million cancer cells strong.
What if we had better
technologies
to detect some of these more deadly cancers sooner, when they could be removed, when they were just getting started?
They've been swept away over the last two decades by these types of world-flattening digitization technologies, right?
In order for us to really empower and inspire the next generation of scientists, we really need teachers to drive the adoption of new
technologies
in the classroom.
And so in many ways, I believe that the next big, quantum leap in science education lies no longer with the technology, but rather with the teachers' decision to push forward and adopt these
technologies
inside the classrooms.
But time and time again, we’ve also failed to predict that the
technologies
of the present will change the future.
Here's an idea worth spreading: let's learn more about where nonviolent action has worked and how we can make it more powerful, just like we do with other systems and
technologies
that are constantly being refined to better meet human needs.
With human innovation, we can make nonviolent struggle more powerful than the newest and latest
technologies
of war.
And of course, these
technologies
evolve, there's connected dispensers, reminder apps, smart pill bottle caps that can text or tweet you or your mother if you haven't taken your medications.
We think that the regulatory route [may] be automated compounding, and especially in nursing homes, folks are taking multiple medications, and they're often mixed up, so it would be a perfect place to start with these
technologies.
We need to be intelligent and smart about how we roll these things out, but realizing there's so many challenges with dosing, adherence and precision, and now that we have all these amazing new
technologies
that can integrate and be leveraged, I think we need approaches like this to really catalyze and foster a true future of health and medicine.
So Aaron Koblin and I began auditioning new
technologies
that could put more of you inside of the work, like your childhood home in "The Wilderness Downtown," your hand-drawn portraits, in "The Johnny Cash Project," and your interactive dreams in "3 Dreams of Black."
Essilor carefully scans the competitive environment for potentially disruptive
technologies.
It acquires those
technologies
very early, before they've become expensive or competitors have mobilized around them, and it then develops those
technologies
itself, even at the risk of failure or the risk of self-disruption.
We're trying to figure out how to build
technologies
that let us look at and repair the brain.
If we really want to understand this, we're going to need new
technologies.
We've all seen lots of different
technologies
over the last century to try to confront this.
So if we want to make our ability to see the brain more powerful, to get down to the ground truth structure, we're going to need to have even better
technologies.
I could pour much more of this in there, but I think you've got the idea that this is a very, very interesting molecule, and if can use it in the right way, we might be able to really zoom in on the brain in a way that you can't do with past
technologies.
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