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Continuous and tone
P25 systems do not support Continuous Tone-Coded Squelch System ( CTCSS ) tone or Digital-Coded Squelch ( DCS ) codes for access control.
Continuous Tone Coded Squelch System ( CTCSS ) allows a group of radios set with the same tone to converse on a channel without hearing other radios using that channel.

Continuous and can
Continuous distillation can be run at a steady state for an arbitrary amount of time.
Continuous tracks can be traced back as far as 1770 and today are commonly used on a variety of vehicles including bulldozers, excavators, tanks, and tractors, but can be found on any vehicle used in an application that can benefit from the added traction, low ground pressure and durability inherent in continuous track propulsion systems.
Continuous noise can occur if the plug partially falls out of the jack, breaking ground connection but not the signal.
More on this can be seen on < cite > Goldratt's Theory of Constraints-A Systems Approach to Continuous Improvement </ cite > by William Dettmer ISBN 0-87389-370-0.
In the US, one can generally cut 20 ft or 6 meters ( or a bit more with MSHA permission ) ( 12 meters or roughly 40 ft in South Africa before the Continuous Miner goes out and the roof is supported by the Roof Bolter ), after which, the face has to be serviced, before it can be advanced again.
An MCU is characterised according to the number of simultaneous calls it can handle, its ability to conduct transposing of data rates and protocols, and features such as Continuous Presence, in which multiple parties can be seen on-screen at once.
Continuous control design methods are not as susceptible to these problems and can be made to mimic sliding-mode controllers.
* Continuous tractive effort: Continuous tractive effort is the tractive force that can be generated at any given speed.
Continuous compounding can be thought of as making the compounding period infinitesimally small ; therefore achieved by taking the limit of n to infinity.
Continuous dehydration can cause many problems, but is most often associated with renal problems and neurological problems such as seizures.
Continuous flow is permitted as long as so-called invariants hold, while discrete transitions can occur as soon as given jump conditions are satisfied.
For example, Continuous Kwik Cricket can be played by two groups of 10 or 12, with each batting for a set period of time, the Lord's Game can be played by two groups of four or five, and Pairs Kwik Cricket works for groups of 8, each playing as a pair and rotating the roles ( batsmen ; bowler and wicket-keeper ; leg side and off side fielders ).
Continuous quantities are those for which magnitudes can be represented as real numbers and for which, therefore, measurements can be expressed on a continuum.
Stressing is a technique developed in the 1960s to avert rail track problems that can occur when installing Continuous welded rail ( CWR ).
It is intended to create a Continuous Media Web ( CMWeb ), whereby continuous media can be manipulated in a similar manner to text media on the World Wide Web, including searching and dynamic arrangement of elements.
Continuous light application of the brakes can be particularly destructive in both wear and adding heat to the brake system.
Continuous Production can be supplemented using a Continuous Processor.

Continuous and be
Continuous low-level lighting may be provided in the shelter by means of a 4-cell hot-shot battery to which is wired a 150-milliampere flashlight-type bulb.
; Public regulated navigation ( encrypted ): Continuous availability even if other services are disabled in time of crisis ; Government agencies will be main users.
The Pulsed UWB Radio is based on Continuous Pulsed UWB technology ( see C-UWB ) and will be able to deliver communications and high precision ranging.
Continuous operation usually requires that there be fully redundant configuration, or at least a sufficient X out of Y degree of redundancy for compatible equipment, where X is the number of spare components and Y is the number of operational components.
Intersections with continuous-flow lanes will be posted with a white regulatory sign approximately 500 feet before the intersection with the phrase, " Right Lane Continuous Traffic ," or other similar wording.
Continuous functions f and g are said to be homotopic if and only if there is a homotopy H taking f to g as described above.
Continuous lines demarcate septum and free wall seen in echocardiogram, dotted line is a suggestion of where the free wall of the right ventricle should be.
* " brake " Continuous brakes, to put at the command of the engine driver adequate braking power ; this requirement being increased as the technology made it reasonable to ' automatic ' ( in modern parlance ' fail-safe ') continuous brakes which had to be ' held off ' by vacuum or compressed air and would be applied automatically if that supply was lost ( e. g. if a train were divided ).
In extreme cases, the procedure may be indicated as a treatment for severe Obstructive Sleep Apnea seen in patients intolerant of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure ( CPAP ) therapy.
Continuous no-till needs to be managed very differently in order to keep or increase yield on the field.

Continuous and achieved
Even once MRSLI status is achieved, however, an interpreter is required to undertake Continuous Professional Development and when available, specialist training is required to work in specific domains.

Continuous and with
* Continuous strengthening of the strategic partnership with the United States, while devoting special attention to the relations and cooperation also with the Russian Federation and the People ’ s Republic of China.
Continuous Integrated Triage is an approach to triage in mass casualty situations which is both efficient and sensitive to psychosocial and disaster behavioral health issues that affect the number of patients seeking care ( surge ), the manner in which a hospital or healthcare facility deals with that surge ( surge capacity ) and the overarching medical needs of the event.
Continuous Integrated Triage combines three forms of triage with progressive specificity to most rapidly identify those patients in greatest need of care while balancing the needs of the individual patients against the available resources and the needs of other patients.
Continuous problems with bark beetle and storms were the negative side effects of mining in the Harz mountains.
" Continuous Cut " refers to when you are again faced with stalemate within a duel, where your swords are clasped together.
* Continuous mining utilizes a Continuous Miner Machine with a large rotating steel drum equipped with tungsten carbide teeth that scrape coal from the seam.
Continuous support during labour provided by doulas ( along with variety of groups such as nurses, midwives, other hospital staff, partners, family or friends ) have been associated with improved outcomes for both mothers and children.
He quickly attracted one hundred pupils, and in 1971, with the support of the Institute for Comparative Study, he inaugurated the International Academy for Continuous Education, in the village of Sherborne, Gloucestershire, England.
These principles include: Pull processing, Perfect first-time quality, Waste minimization, Continuous improvement, Flexibility, Building and maintaining a long term relationship with suppliers, Autonomation, Load leveling and Production flow and Visual control.
Continuous hinges are manufactured with or without holes.
Continuous abstinence / recovery: ranged from less than one year up to 40 years, with a mean average of 7. 4 years.
* ( bounded ) Continuous, where the respondent is presented with a continuous scale
Continuous weeding is required for the growth of good quality coffee. The coffee agro-forestry systems of Kodagu are one of the richest agro-forest in the world, with about 270 species of shaded trees inventoried ( see publications of CAFNET project ).
Continuous vine scrolls in a great variety of designs of the same general type as the central motif, with few leaves and round fruits, were very common in slightly later religious Anglo-Saxon art, and are often combined with interlace in the same work, especially on Anglo-Saxon crosses, for example the Bewcastle Cross and the Easby Cross now in the Victoria and Albert Museum.

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