Sentences with phrase «serious public technology»

It is you, not we, who suggest that doing so contradicts establishing a serious public technology policy and investment agenda.

Not exact matches

The positive public response to the exhibition encouraged the company to get serious about commercializing the technology.
The Office of Technology Assessment estimates that at least 10,000 hazardous waste sites in the U.S. now pose a serious threat to public health and are in dire need of cleaning up.
In the first State of the State message open to the public and the first using internet - age technology to deliver the presentation, Governor Cuomo said he would open up government to the public and work in partnership with all stakeholders to address the serious fiscal challenges facing New York State and its local governments.
With voice - first, connected - home technology (think Amazon Echo, Google Assistant) exploding into the public consciousness and audio publishing finally taking its rightful place as a serious player, we're seeing a broader audience of reluctant readers and non-readers discovering information and storytelling in their own way.
Putting serious public - private investment money on the table — somewhere on the order of $ 1.5 trillion between the U.S. and Europe over 10 years — would change the equation, since China would stand to benefit from a massive rise in demand for clean technologies like solar, which it may dominate.
In - house lawyers who blog share a «desire to participate in serious dialogue, whether it be about public policy or emerging technologies and related laws,» Aman say.
In recent years, the USPTO has come under increasing scrutiny over the quality of its patent examinations.1 The growing push for reform of the patent system is fueled by the rapid rise of technology, financial services, telecommunications, and other innovations driving the information economy, all straining the USPTO's ability to evaluate and issue quality patents.2 Problems with patent quality occur when the Patent Office grants patents on claims that are broader than what is merited by the invention and the prior art. 3 In fact, a number of these problematic patents have been issued and publicized to much fanfare, including the infamous Smuckers» peanut butter and jelly patent where the company asserted a patent on their method of making the UncrustiblesTM crust-less peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, among others.4 These «bad» or improvidently granted patents impact the USPTO's ability to promote overall patent quality which, I will show, has serious implications for the public domain.
A 2 - to 4 - year window may exist between initial presentation of symptoms and the development of a disorder, suggesting an opportunity to intervene before problems become more serious in children.6 In recent years, many pediatricians have taken advantage of more widely disseminated public domain screening tools and have used emerging computer technology to facilitate behavioral / emotional screening.
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