Technological in a sentence as an adjective

The overoptimism may have been due to the rate of technological growth leading up to 1964.

It is a fact today that one in ten thousand of us can make a technological breakthrough capable of supporting all the rest.

What we're seeing now isn't the end of some long civil discussion about what rights everybody should have in a technological world.

Whenever there's some sort of technological thing going on in the world, security related, Bruce's blog[2] is often one of the first place I go to.

This passage is just beautiful:"Modern cell phones are not just another technological\nconvenience.

" because patent lawyers is what the system creates, at the expense of technological innovation, as I see it anyway.

While I understand and sympathise with the compulsion to resist surveillance in this practical, technological way, I think it might be the wrong reaction to the information.

According to this Adobe employee it should be the chief most concern, even dominating other things like features, usability, UX, cost, technological debt, etc.

And, if someone already has vast power over you, it is but a small step to extend that power in a technological age by using technology to spy upon, intimidate, and control people.

If it is said that the NSA cannot target emails and listen to phone calls, that is going to etch itself into the public consciousness that the technological apparatus required is not present.

Steve did not contribute any original ideas or any important technological innovations.

The Court held that, in doing so, Congress intended to bring cable-like services such as Aereo into the Act's sweep regardless of the particular technological ways in which it handled the copyrighted material as it re-transmitted it to its users.

"This is a soundly reasoned decision that is a highlight of modern law not so much because of any deep legal reasoning as such but because it profoundly captures and applies the spirit of the law in ways that comport with modern technological advancement.

Maybe I'm just old-fashioned, but I really don't like how emotionally charged most products are today, in the sense that they are supposed to not only solve a technological problem, but at the same time fulfill a social or even religious role and provide "human warmth", as the author puts it.

Technological definitions

adjective

based in scientific and industrial progress; "a technological civilization"

adjective

of or relating to a practical subject that is organized according to scientific principles; "technical college"; "technological development"

See also: technical