Caution! The site can't guarantee, that text has age permission. The site is not recommended, if you are less than 18 years old.
The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... However, balancing a consummate consumer search experience with industry nuance and insights can be difficult at times. Online search features like flood risk, automated valuation models, noise filters and crime overlays can help consumers add context to their home search, but sometimes can be controversial with real estate professionals. It's human nature to resist change and to be concerned about what those changes may mean for businesses and livelihoods, but the digital real estate marketplace opens the door to ways of doing business that weren't possible before. Consumer-friendly features that engage people ultimately benefit the professionals who want to work with them. Applied data analytics from consumer engagement gives agents and brokers greater insights into potential customers' intentions, so they can focus efforts on leads that are most likely to convert. Online search patterns can inform larger demographic and psychographic trends, which helps agents understand how to best market and position homes for sale. ... "
" ... Of course, as a constructed reality, the geographic overlays of augmented reality appear only within the world of a single application. A geotagged tweet is not visible in Instagram, a geotagged Facebook ad does not appear in Snapchat and so on. While the web's DNS system built on the physical world’s legacy of textual names that could be trademarked and offered a single centralized directory to the entire digital world, augmented reality relies on points in geographic space across myriad independent constructed worlds. Can a company exert the right to commercial activity at a specific latitude and longitude coordinate across all digital applications present and future merely because they own that right in the physical world? Do online companies enjoy the right to plaster public spaces with digital billboards and commercialize government-owned land for free? What happens when an augmented reality startup is bought by another company – do all of the geofenced advertisements it had sold (themselves essentially micro-term digital land leases) transfer to the purchasing company? Does a company in the physical world have to pay money to Facebook to run an advertisement for users visiting its physical location? Or does Facebook’s digital overlay count itself as a new form of land ownership where it alone acts as landlord and legal system? Moreover, given the nature of the online world, a company in Russia can easily sell geofenced ads across the United States and vice-versa, meaning companies across the world can now act as virtual landlords across all the world’s physical space. Even if the US were to pass a law tying virtual use of a location to its physical ownership, could it stop a foreign company from erecting its own overlays over US soil? ... "
" ... “In healthcare, surgeons - who previously only relied on x-rays and MRIs - can now use AR glasses to project real-time overlays of MRI results onto their patients while operating. This allows for more precise interventions and better patient care. Alongside this, AR is being used to assist those working in factory environments, enabling staff access to real-time and hands-free instructions for machinery, saving them time flicking through instruction guides.” ... "
" ... “There's so much video, there's so much analysis,” Verlander said. “We use the analysis to study our mechanics. You do overlays of video comparing yourself to when you were good, to when you were bad, and seeing if anything is different. Well, the same can be done to compare if you're tipping pitches: fastball vs. slider, fastball vs. screwball, whatever. ... "