You need to recognize the fact that something unanticipated could happen.
‘Stop asking for a ‘viral’ anything’: Why Ocean Spray’s successful meme can’t be replicated|Kristina Monllos|October 12, 2020|Digiday
Its creators hope to define objects in a way that’s useful now but flexible enough to accommodate the unanticipated uses mathematicians might have for these objects.
Building the Mathematical Library of the Future|Kevin Hartnett|October 1, 2020|Quanta Magazine
These microscopic air bags “have so many uses that were totally unanticipated,” Shapiro says.
This year’s SN 10 scientists aim to solve some of science’s biggest challenges|Science News Staff|September 30, 2020|Science News
The example resonates because wars, like pandemics, create dramatic, unanticipated needs for medical innovations.
Times of strife can lead to medical innovation—when governments are willing|By Jeffrey Clemens/The Conversation|September 9, 2020|Popular Science
I mean, it has very little to do with the unanticipated uses.
The Internet Won’t Save Us: Evgeny Morozov’s Stand Against Technology Solutionism|Robert Herritt|March 5, 2013|DAILY BEAST
They can also have unintended and unanticipated consequences.
Banning the Big Gulp and Taxing Sodas Are Lousy Solutions to the Obesity Problem|Richard B. McKenzie|June 2, 2012|DAILY BEAST
Meanwhile, the conservative activist Ralph Reed called it “an unanticipated gift to the Romney campaign.”
Religious Right to Obama: Duh!|David Sessions|May 10, 2012|DAILY BEAST
And in some places, it has worked out—but with unanticipated complications.
Back to School for the Billionaires|Rita Beamish|May 2, 2011|DAILY BEAST
Despite years in adult entertainment, this exposure of her private life was unprecedented and unanticipated, says Foster.
The Person Behind the Porn Wikileaks Website|Richard Abowitz|April 1, 2011|DAILY BEAST
For it was a charm; an actual feminine, an unanticipated personal, charm; past reach of tongue to name, wordless in thought.
The Amazing Marriage, Complete|George Meredith
Twelve days later M. Waldeck-Rousseau died, having lived just long enough to see this unanticipated result of his policy.