Well
in sentence
39549 examples of Well in a sentence
EM: Well, as I mentioned earlier, we have to have sustainable electricity production as
well
as consumption, so I'm quite confident that the primary means of power generation will be solar.
EM:
Well
actually, I'm confident that solar will beat everything, hands down, including natural gas.
EM: Well, essentially, SolarCity raises a chunk of capital from say, a company or a bank.
And so I tell people, well, I was trying to figure out the fastest way to turn a large fortune into a small one.
EM: Well, we've made significant advances in the technology of the airframe, the engines, the electronics and the launch operation.
Obviously that doesn't work very
well
for — CA: What just happened there?
CA: Well, I have a theory.EM: Okay.
EM: Well, thanks.
Well, I do think there's a good framework for thinking.
Well, there do seem to be a few.
Well, congratulations, because if you look at this particular slide of U.S. life expectancy, you are now in excess of the average life span of somebody who was born in 1900.
Well, wouldn't it be nice if it was that easy?
Maybe you've got a swimmer and a rowboat and a sailboat and a tugboat and you set them off on their way, and the rains come and the lightning flashes, and oh my gosh, there are sharks in the water and the swimmer gets into trouble, and, uh oh, the swimmer drowned and the sailboat capsized, and that tugboat, well, it hit the rocks, and maybe if you're lucky, somebody gets across.
Well, what does this really look like?
Well, what is it to make a therapeutic, anyway?
Ultimately, maybe you can run a clinical trial with four or five of these, and if all goes well, 14 years after you started, you will get one approval.
Well, let me tell you about a few examples where this has actually worked.
Well, one way to go faster is to take advantage of technology, and a very important technology that we depend on for all of this is the human genome, the ability to be able to look at a chromosome, to unzip it, to pull out all the DNA, and to be able to then read out the letters in that DNA code, the A's, C's, G's and T's that are our instruction book and the instruction book for all living things, and the cost of doing this, which used to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars, has in the course of the last 10 years fallen faster than Moore's Law, down to the point where it is less than 10,000 dollars today to have your genome sequenced, or mine, and we're headed for the $1,000 genome fairly soon.
Well, that's exciting.
Well
again, by knowing something about the molecular pathways, it was possible to pick one of those many, many compounds that might have been useful and try it out.
Well
that was exciting, but would it actually work in a real human being?
His parents, Scott Berns and Leslie Gordon, both physicians, are here with us this morning as
well.
Sam Burns: Well, progeria limits me in some ways.
What would you say to them both about research on progeria and maybe about other conditions as
well?
SB: Well, research on progeria has come so far in less than 15 years, and that just shows the drive that researchers can have to get this far, and it really means a lot to myself and other kids with progeria, and it shows that if that drive exists, anybody can cure any disease, and hopefully progeria can be cured in the near future, and so we can eliminate those 4,000 diseases that Francis was talking about.
FC:
Well
done.
Well
done, buddy.
Turned out, it didn't work very
well
for cancer, but it has exactly the right properties, the right shape, to work for progeria, and that's what's happened.
It didn't work very
well
for cancer, but became the first successful antiretroviral, and you can see from the table there are others as
well.
Well, we have to come up with a partnership between academia, government, the private sector, and patient organizations to make that so.
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