Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

59 Sentences With "wrote software"

How to use wrote software in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "wrote software" and check conjugation/comparative form for "wrote software". Mastering all the usages of "wrote software" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In the 1980s, she wrote software for NASA's Deep Space Network.
His father, who also worked in Chicago, wrote software for manufacturing companies.
Meanwhile, Gemmel and Lueder wrote software for indexing and searching Bell's log.
Okay, so you wrote software by day and you wrote fiction by night.
And so I had the Amiga and I wrote software and designed some hardware.
He wrote software that runs the popular corporate messaging service Slack on his Commodore 64.
Yes, you can upgrade hardware, although we also wrote software to accelerate rendering on old MCU.
We wrote software to download these lists directly from Facebook, something the platform allowed at the time.
Using an older version of Apple's operating system, Green's team wrote software to mimic an Apple server.
And all these vertical applications, just like back in the day, we wrote software for different verticals and applied it.
For his 2011 film Addressability, Jeff Guess wrote software that continually constructs and deconstructs selfies uploaded to social media—pixel by pixel.
Biometric data was collected as they wrote software and this was correlated with interviews with the developers and human-based code reviews.
If you don't know any better, it's like if you just had somebody who wrote software and didn't know anything about your business.
Then a student at Harvard, Gates and long-time friend Paul Allen wrote software for the system and landed a deal with the team.
He likened maps to huge jigsaw puzzles with thousands of pieces, and wrote software that deconstructs those maps into larger blocks or hundreds of thousands of pieces.
Ullman went on to work for a number of startups—including a nascent Sybase, where, as the first engineering hire, she wrote software to manage relational databases.
It wrote software to predict how much it needed to spend on Facebook ads to stay on the bestseller charts, where the added visibility generated additional sales.
The researchers wrote software that was able to convert different metal elements known to be found in different paint colors into a plausible color reconstruction of the painting.
"All the schedules were entered into the PDP-6 computer at M.I.T., and I wrote software that would find what nominally would be the quickest route," Mr. Samson said.
While he was growing up, in Australia, his mother moved the family dozens of times, and the habit of motion seems to have persisted; he once wrote software on the Trans-Siberian Express.
Writing this week in Nature Astronomy, Dr Tsiaras describes how his team wrote software that could analyse the data collected by Hubble to try to do the same job—up to a point.
The company was founded by Eugene V. Kaspersky, who attended a high school that trained Russian spies, and later wrote software for the Soviet Army before going on to found Kaspersky Lab in 1997.
Tripp, according to Tesla, wrote software to hack the company's manufacturing system, improperly gave the information he found to "third parties" and to the media, but also made false statements about the company's inner workings.
In celebration of last month's momentous anniversary, below is a snapshot of the seminal moments in the GIF's 30-year history: 1987: The graphics interchange format (GIF) is successfully deployed by Steve Wilhite, who wrote software at CompuServe.
How we got the data: We wrote software to scan through more than three years' worth of press releases issued by the Department of Defense, and parsed each release to collect detailed information about the location of every airstrike.
The son of a medical anthropologist and a public-health epidemiologist, Dean grew up all over the world — Minnesota, Hawaii, Boston, Arkansas, Geneva, Uganda, Somalia, Atlanta — and, while in high school and college, wrote software used by the World Health Organization.
"I wrote software that included code that allowed me to understand or technically predict winning numbers, and I gave those numbers to other individuals who then won the lottery and shared the winnings with me," Tipton said when asked by Judge Brad McCall to explain what he did.
To adapt to the swiftly changing conditions as the ISS zooms around its orbit at 17,130 miles per hour, Fernandez and his team wrote software that is constantly on the lookout for potential issues, analyzing the system for dropped information, power fluctuations, and any other signal that all might not be well.
He also decided he wanted a change of scene — pulling a "geographic" in the parlance of A.A. Over the protests of Mr. Cohn, he briefly took a job at another Wall Street company, Credit Suisse, then jumped back into the start-up world, building a company, Kiodex, that wrote software to evaluate energy-trading risks.
But eBay, in the beginning, because it was based so much on auction stuff, I thought was, not that it would be a failure, but it would be very, very niche, to people that loved auction stuff, and despite the fact that people very quickly wrote software to outbid you in the last 10 seconds of the auction, and all that kind of stuff.
Prior to his work on Proxomitron, Scott wrote software for the Atari ST line of computers.
During his PhD he developed an interest in personal computers and wrote software programs to fit NMR relaxation data. Williams continued his work in spectroscopy at the National Research Council (Canada) using EPR spectroscopy to perform single- crystal studies of organometallics compounds.
From 1961 to 1963, Hamilton worked on the Semi-Automatic Ground Environment (SAGE) Project at the MIT Lincoln Lab, where she was one of the programmers who wrote software for the prototype AN/FSQ-7 computer (the XD-1), used by the U.S. Air Force to search for possibly unfriendly aircraft. She also wrote software for a satellite tracking project at the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories. The SAGE Project was an extension of Project Whirlwind, started by MIT to create a computer system that could predict weather systems and track their movements using simulators. SAGE was soon developed for military use in anti-aircraft air defense from potential Soviet attacks during the Cold War.
After earning her teaching degree, Hersom worked as a teacher, but realized she didn't enjoy that work. She started working in the Theory Division at Elliott Brothers in Borehamwood, UK, in 1953. There she wrote software programs for Nicholas, a research computer. Some of the software she developed processed radar data.
He attended Harvard University, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in physics and ancient history. He then took graduate courses in physics at the University of Cambridge and Stanford University. Unz worked in the banking industry and wrote software for mortgage securities during his studies. He founded a company called Wall Street Analytics in Palo Alto, California.
He wrote software that incorporated pictures in documents that were typeset using PAGE-1. He wrote several books with his three teenage children, Gabrielle, Simon and Graham, aimed at the home market. These dealt with the production of computer graphics on early personal computers, that included the Commodore 64, the Apple II, and IBM PC, and the use of elementary algorithms.
Peters began his work on PLATO III. By 1972, the PLATO IV system made it technically possible to introduce multimedia pedagogies that were not available in the marketplace until years later. Between 1974 and 1988, 25 U of I music faculty participated in software curriculum development and more than 40 graduate students wrote software and assisted the faculty in its use.
Gabaldon was the founding editor of Science Software Quarterly in 1984 while employed at the Center for Environmental Studies at Arizona State University. During the mid-1980s, Gabaldon wrote software reviews and technical articles for computer publications, as well as popular- science articles and Disney comics. She was a professor with an expertise in scientific computation at ASU for 12 years before leaving to write full-time.
The company was founded in Houston, Texas, by former Shell Oil employees Scott Boulette, John J. Moores, and Dan Cloer, whose surname initials were adopted as the company name BMC Software. Moores served as the company's first CEO. The firm primarily wrote software for IBM mainframe computers, the industry standard at the time. In 1987, Moores was succeeded by Richard A. Hosley II as CEO and President.
During the dotcom boom in 1995, Bahan Sadegh decided to start a business that wrote software for biometric devices. Sadegh, was then a senior at Arizona State University. The goal at the time was to help businesses manage their employee's hours, vacation time, sick leave, and pay schedule with web-based software that was simple to use. In 1996, the company was incorporated in Scottsdale, Arizona as Vitrix Inc.
Among the audio recordings were 30-track tapes of voice recordings at every Mission Control station. Ben Feist, a Canadian software engineer, wrote software to improve the fidelity of the newly available audio. Slater, who had synchronized audio recordings with silent 16 mm Mission Control footage in earlier projects, performed the task of synchronizing the audio and film. The production team was able to identify "Mother Country", a song by folk musician John Stewart, in Lunar Module voice recordings.
The renovation was orchestrated by Matt Bucy, a Yale-trained architect who formerly wrote software for New England Digital. The Main Street Museum, described by the Washington Post as "quirky and avant garde", is an eclectic display space for material culture and an experiment in a new taxonomy. It makes its home in White River Junction's former fire station on Bridge Street, next to the underpass. White River Junction is home to Northern Stage, a professional regional theatre.
In 2010, Dr. Sanjiv Narayan and Dr. Ruchir Sehra founded Topera in San Diego, California . Narayan founded the company to commercialize the technology he developed which maps irregular heartbeats. Prior to founding the company, he had collected cardiac electrophysiological data from patients and wrote software to code and analyze collected data. He conducted clinical studies to prove that conventional pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) plus targeting and ablating rotors and focal impulses would increase the success rate of single procedure atrial fibrillation ablations.
The LM-1 was designed by American engineer Roger Linn. In 1978, Linn, a guitarist, was dissatisfied with drum machines available at the time, such as the Roland CR-78, and wanted "a drum machine that did more than play preset samba patterns and didn't sound like crickets". He took a voice generator from a Roland drum machine and wrote software to create patterns. At the suggestion of Toto keyboardist Steve Porcaro, Linn recorded samples of real drums to a computer chip.
In early 2017, after Trump's election, Chakrabarti, Zack Exley, a former fellow Bernie Sanders presidential campaign executive, Cenk Uygur of The Young Turks and Kyle Kulinski of Secular Talk became co-founders of the Justice Democrats. As Chakrabarti, Rojas, and Trent were less involved with Brand New Congress, they became leaders of the Justice Democrats. Chakrabarti, as an executive director of Justice Democrats wrote software to organize in a "distributed fashion". Justice Democrats targeted an entrenched "corporate Democrat" in Joe Crowley.
He was sentenced to six months of house arrest and ordered to pay $409,000 in restitution. In June 2017, Eddie Tipton confessed in court to having installed the rigged random number generator in 2005 or 2006. "I wrote software that included code that allowed me to technically predict winning numbers and I gave those numbers to other individuals who then won the lottery and shared those winnings with me," he said. He admitted to fixing lotteries in Colorado, Oklahoma, Wisconsin and Kansas as well as Iowa.
SDRC was formed by engineers, led by then associate professor Dr. Jason R. Lemon, from the University of Cincinnati in 1967, as a consulting company specializing in structural dynamics, or how mechanical parts vibrate. US Steel was a primary customer and early investor, until selling their shares to General Electric in the early 80's. To aid in its consulting, the company wrote software to simulate and predict vibration. Companies began asking for rights to use this software, and thus SDRC entered the software market.
" He purchased equipment and wrote software that allowed him to record and analyze heartbeats, and began studying his own heartbeat rhythms as well as those of friends and other musicians. After decades of study, Graves used some of the funds from his 2000 Guggenheim Fellowship to purchase additional equipment and software. He wrote: "Initially I recorded heartbeats through an electronic stethoscope and listened to the different patterns of those rhythms. More recently, the use of LabVIEW, a software program, has provided much more detailed data.
Students of Jack Dennis and John McCarthy discovered a stunning array of uses for the very expensive room- sized computers that were given to MIT. They were privileged to be enrolled when the school's first programming courses were taught. They negotiated with their advisors and the operations manager John McKenzie for time and became single-users long before personal computers were available. About 1959 or 1960, some of this group of students became support staff and wrote software for about $1.75 USD per hour.
Padilla is one of three children of Santos and Lupe Padilla, both of whom emigrated from Mexico before meeting and marrying in Los Angeles. Padilla grew up in the community of Pacoima in Los Angeles and is a graduate of San Fernando High School in the northeast San Fernando Valley. He earned a degree in mechanical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1994. After graduation, he moved back to Pacoima and briefly worked as an engineer for Hughes Aircraft, where he wrote software for satellite systems.
While working at Argonne, Butler made calculations for physicists creating a prototype for a submarine reactor and attended atomic physics and reactor design classes. In 1949, she worked at the Bureau of Labor Statistics in Minnesota but returned to Argonne National Laboratory in 1951. Following her return to Argonne, Butler became an assistant mathematician in the Reactor Engineering Division and worked on AVIDAC, an early computer. In the 1950s Butler wrote software, reactor applications, mathematical subroutines, and utilities for three other Argonne computers, the ORACLE, GEORGE, and UNIVAC.
In the same year he joined Cascade Games, where he worked on 19 Part One: Boot Camp, Arcade Trivia Quiz, and Arcade Trivia Quiz Question Creator. In 1989 Warriner moved to Bytron Aviation Systems based in Kirmington, Lincolnshire, where he wrote software for the aviation industry, David Sykes was his fellow programmer. In March 1990 Cecil, Sykes, Noirin Carmody and Warriner founded Revolution Software. For their first game he wrote an innovative engine, called Virtual Theatre, which enabled the gameworld to be more active and dynamic than was previously possible.
Skyward was founded by Jim King in 1980 in Stevens Point, Wisconsin under the name Jim King and Associates. King worked as a subcontracted employee for a variety of businesses around Wisconsin, writing human resources and accounting software for IBM 5100 computers. In 1981, King wrote software for Merrill Area Public Schools, which was subsequently purchased by three other districts in Wisconsin. In 1984, Jim King and Associates incorporated as a company and adopted the name School Administrative Software, Incorporated (SASI) In 1988 and 1992, SASI opened offices in St. Cloud, Minnesota and Bloomington, Illinois, respectively.
Brian Carpenter spent 25 years, from 1971 to 1996, working at the European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN). He initially wrote software for process control systems, and later served as the head of the networking group from 1985 to 1996, working alongside Robert Cailliau and Tim Berners-Lee, who invented the World Wide Web. He took three years off of his CERN career to teach undergraduate computer science at Massey University in New Zealand. When Carpenter left CERN, he joined IBM, where he was an IBM Distinguished Engineer working on Internet Standards and Technology between 1997 and 2007.
In 2006 Adam Laurie wrote software that tries all known passport keys within a given range, thus implementing one of Witteman's attacks. Using online flight booking sites, flight coupons and other public information it's possible to significantly reduce the number of possible keys. In some early biometric passports BAC wasn't used at all, allowing attacker to read the chip's content without providing a key. ; Passive Authentication (PA) : In 2006 Lukas Grunwald demonstrated that it is trivial to copy passport data from a passport chip into a standard ISO/IEC 14443 smartcard using a standard contactless card interface and a simple file transfer tool.
Some of the first computer music was created in 1961 by LaFarr Stuart, who wrote software to modulate the duration of and between pulses (pulse-width modulation or "PWM", via a process now often referred to as "bit banging") on a bus line that had been connected to an amplified speaker originally installed to monitor the functioning of Iowa State University's CYCLONE computer, a derivative of the Illiac. The entire computer was used to create simple, recognizable tunes using digital audio. The speakers in the IBM PC (released in 1981) and its successors may be used to create sounds and music using a similar mechanism.
Although 256 words of memory seems extraordinarily small by contemporary standards, when "toggling in" programs by hand it seemed quite adequate. There was ample space to create programs that played music, sent and received morse code, operated data storage to media such as a cassette player and even offered game experiences (though these required significant imagination by the user). Expanded with additional memory, the 77-68 was quite capable of running software such as the TSC BASIC interpreter and users wrote software that offered a wide range of applications at a time when even word processors were a novelty and spreadsheets were largely unknown.
Iris printers have also been used since the late 1980s as final output digital printing devices in the production of fine art reproductions on various media, including paper, canvas, silk, linen and other textiles. There were many printers, photographers, artists, and engineers who saw the merit in using this industrial proof printer as a way to produce high- resolution color accurate reproductions. Color engineer David Coons used the 3024 at the Walt Disney Company to print images from Disney's new computer 3D animation system. He also wrote software to print works created on desktop computers such as Sally Larsen 1989 Transformer series, and a 1990 photo exhibition for Graham Nash of Crosby, Stills, and Nash.
There are several technical articles that discuss the various electronic throttle control defects he testified were linked to unintended acceleration that caused deaths in Toyota Camry vehicles. Earlier in his career, Barr testified as an expert witness in the DirecTV anti-piracy end user litigation, which involved over 25,000 end users. He has also worked as a testifying expert witness in other high-profile litigation involving software, such as SmartPhone Technologies vs Apple and in a copyright dispute about EA's early Madden Football video game source code. Barr began his career working as an embedded programmer at Hughes Network Systems, where he wrote software for products including the first- generation Hughes-branded DirecTV receiver, which sold in the millions of units.

No results under this filter, show 59 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.