Conduit in a sentence as a noun

Netflix can't excuse itself for being a mere conduit for evil DRM lobby.

The investors should feel lucky to have this conduit of information.

And, in moderation, as a conduit for learning other ideas it could be fantastic.

So, this isn't the computer reading a mind, so much as, a computer tapping the visual processing conduit.

During expansion, a 470 volt three-phase line had been put in, the insulation had been stripped off while they were pulling it through the conduit.

Perhaps because he was able to use 99designs as a conduit for his graphic design career and is now taking on much bigger and better projects?

As the beam travels, it is bounced into a lens with a mirror, or on the inside of a plastic conduit or holographic waveguide.

Although http-conduit and http-client-tls do use it, so everyone writing programs that hit https from haskell using conduit is using it already.

The bigger Amazon's market share, the more responsibility they have to behave neutrally as the primary conduit between their suppliers and their customers.

One of the things I like the most about these photos is the fact that the workers who cut & drilled the walls to install the "new" cables/conduit actually made an effort to not destroy the old clippings on the wall.

To do otherwise would violate the letter and the spirit of the law, and we have chosen instead to abide by it and provide a very specific service, we provide a rented, individual conduit.

Twitter is an optimal conduit for narcissism, trolling, harassment, mobbing, astroturfing, demagoguery, and manufacturing consent.

Conduit definitions

noun

a passage (a pipe or tunnel) through which water or electric wires can pass; "the computers were connected through a system of conduits"