Time
in sentence
51576 examples of Time in a sentence
And I'm starting to get really nervous, because for a long time, no one says anything.
It's different than happiness, which measures how good we feel over
time.
And at the same time, I had another realization, that if these are the things that bring us joy, then why does so much of the world look like this? (Laughter) Why do we go to work here?
Each moment of joy is small, but over time, they add up to more than the sum of their parts.
MRIs use magnetic fields and radio waves and they take snapshots of your brain or your knee or your stomach, grayscale images that are frozen in
time.
It was at the
time
in Houston, Texas.
I guess we've done up to six machines at a time, but let's just focus on two.
So for the first time, we don't have to look at just averages over single individuals, or have individuals playing computers, or try to make inferences that way.
And as I look at the conversation, it strikes me that it's focused on exactly the right topic, and at the same time, it's missing the point entirely.
The decade that we've just been through had relatively anemic job growth all throughout, especially when we compare it to other decades, and the 2000s are the only
time
we have on record where there were fewer people working at the end of the decade than at the beginning.
When you graph the number of potential employees versus the number of jobs in the country, you see the gap gets bigger and bigger over time, and then, during the Great Recession, it opened up in a huge way.
The economist Robert Jensen did this wonderful study a while back where he watched, in great detail, what happened to the fishing villages of Kerala, India, when they got mobile phones for the very first
time.
What happened instead is he very carefully documented what happens over and over again when technology comes for the first
time
to an environment and a community: the lives of people, the welfares of people, improve dramatically.
Our technologies are great gifts, and we, right now, have the great good fortune to be living at a
time
when digital technology is flourishing, when it is broadening and deepening and becoming more profound all around the world.
In this very short period of time, you know, whether you call it the last 15 years or so of being online, or the last, you know, four or five years of being online all the time, our relationship to our surroundings had changed in that our attention is constantly divided.
Because they all started at the same
time
with the boom about 20 years ago.
See, you know, all the
time
online we experience these fleeting moments of connection, these sort of brief adjacencies, a tweet or a Facebook post or an email, and it seemed like there was a physical corollary to that.
And what surprised me as well was that as much as this is based on the most sophisticated technology, as much as this is an incredibly new thing, the physical process itself has been around for a long time, and the culture is the same.
And it seems to me that we talk a lot about the cloud, but every
time
we put something on the cloud, we give up some responsibility for it.
After one of our events at the Patton State Hospital in San Bernardino, a woman walked up to us and she had tears streaming down her face, and she had a palsy, she was shaking, and she had this gorgeous smile, and she said that she had never heard classical music before, she didn't think she was going to like it, she had never heard a violin before, but that hearing this music was like hearing the sunshine, and that nobody ever came to visit them, and that for the first
time
in six years, when she heard us play, she stopped shaking without medication.
Nobody can see
time.
There's a big movement in modern physics to decide that
time
doesn't really exist, because it's too inconvenient for the figures.
You could roll them up, send them ahead of you, and in the
time
it took to hang them up, you could transform a cold, dank interior into a richly colored setting.
Bringing people face to face with our objects is a way of bringing them face to face with people across time, across space, whose lives may have been very different to our own, but who, like us, had hopes and dreams, frustrations and achievements in their lives.
And my grandmother one
time
said, "No, look, you’re not going to run away.
I'm Eddie who is here, and at the same time, my alter ego is a big green boxy avatar nicknamed Cyber Frank.
So that's what I spend my
time
doing.
My simple idea is that what's happened is, the real 21st century around us isn't so obvious to us, so instead we spend our
time
responding rationally to a world which we understand and recognize, but which no longer exists.
At the same time, as we've done that, we've done something really weird.
And then add to that, every
time
you tweet, over a third of your followers follow from a country which is not your own.
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