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inherent and resolution
The resolution limitations for a single stage are given by the inherent resolution of the electron optical system as well as the resolution capabilities of the cathodoluminescent viewing screen.
Frequently the range is an inherent limitation of the display while the resolution is a function of the electronics that make the display work.
Second, because of the inherent high-contrast resolution of CT, differences between tissues that differ in physical density by less than 1 % can be distinguished.
Triple probes have the advantage of simple biasing electronics ( no sweeping required ), simple data analysis, excellent time resolution, and insensitivity to potential fluctuations ( whether imposed by an rf source or inherent fluctuations ).
Eight-bit audio is generally not used due to prominent and inherent quantization noise ( low maximum SQNR ), although the A-law and u-law 8-bit encodings pack more resolution into 8 bits while increase total harmonic distortion.
In most modern NFL resolutions, the value is inherent in the resolution, e. g. " Resolved: A just government should provide health care to its citizens " or " Resolved: A victim ’ s deliberate use of deadly force is a just response to repeated domestic violence ".
The three most notable examples are the Kellogg-Briand Pact outlawing war as an instrument of national policy, the London Charter ( known also as the Nuremberg Charter ) defining " crimes against peace " as one of three major categories of international crime to be prosecuted after World War II, and the United Nations Charter, which binds nations to seek resolution of disputes by peaceful means and requires authorization by the United Nations before a nation may initiate any use of force against another, beyond the inherent right of self-defense against an armed attack.
Chief among these were disciples of the utopian theorist Charles Fourier ; they disapproved of the " immorality " inherent in the novel's bleak resolution.
Ultimately the quality ( roughness ) as well as resolution of this polymer etching limits the inherent resolution of the lithography technique.

inherent and phosphor
These were cathode ray tubes ( CRT ) that stored information written to them using an analog technique inherent in the CRT and based upon the secondary emission of electrons from the phosphor screen itself.

inherent and screen
A pioneer of quick-cut editing, multiple screen images ( the first in film and television in 1963 ) animation, and endowed with an inherent sense of playfulness, Ferro ’ s influential visual style has enormously enriched film, television, animation, commercials, novels and now children ’ s books.
Historiophoty today, therefore, is an ongoing process which recognises the inherent problems in bringing history in general-and medieval history in particular, given its vulnerability to be hijacked by the fantasy genre-to life on the screen.
Also, the image overlap inherent in the use of wobulation eliminates the ' screen door ' effect common on other fixed pixel displays such as plasma and LCD, but may in some implementations also create some reduction in sharpness.
Robert Mitchum carries the burden of the film and his acting is superior all the way ... Lillie Hayward's screen play, taken from a novel by Luke Short, is solidly constructed and by not over-emphasizing Jim Garry's inherent honesty, she has permitted Mr. Mitchum to illuminate a character that is reasonable and most always interesting.

inherent and with
For a serious young man who plays golf with a serious intensity, Palmer has such an inherent sense of humor that it relieves the strain and keeps his nerves from jangling like banjo strings.
The unsatisfactory 1958-60 expansion, he said, was not due to inadequate growth forces inherent in our economy but rather to the adverse effect of inappropriate economic policies combined with retrenching decisions resulting from the steel strike.
Abugidas always mark the vowels ( other than the " inherent " vowel ) with a diacritic, a minor attachment to the letter, or a standalone glyph.
* a lack of vowel marking ( often with ambiguity between no vowel and a default inherent vowel ),
Literary critics Barthes and Foucault suggest that readers should not rely on or look for the notion of one overarching voice when interpreting a written work, because of the complications inherent with a writer's title of " author.
Applications could not directly address video memory in this mode without modification, so it was incompatible with most games, although there is no inherent reason why a game could not be written to function in shadow mode.
These contradictions are inherent in reason when it is applied to the world as it is in itself, independently of our perceptions of it ( this has to do with the distinction between phenomena and noumena ).
Their representation of real-life situations can range from having no inherent theme, as with checkers, to having a specific theme and narrative, as with Cluedo.
ould it be too bold to imagine, that in the great length of time, since the earth began to exist, perhaps millions of ages before the commencement of the history of mankind, would it be too bold to imagine, that all warm-blooded animals have arisen from one living filament, which endued with animality, with the power of acquiring new parts attended with new propensities, directed by irritations, sensations, volitions, and associations ; and thus possessing the faculty of continuing to improve by its own inherent activity, and of delivering down those improvements by generation to its posterity, world without end?
The events in Abidjan shows that it is not a tribal issue, but a crisis of transition from a dictatorship to a democracy, with the clashes inherent in the definition of citizenship.
Therefore, inherent in systems of power, is always " truth ," which is culturally specific, inseparable from ideology which often coincides with various forms of hegemony.
His abstract style emphasizes clean geometrical lines that balance forms inherent in his materials with the symbolic allusions of representational art.
The same basic engine block can be used with different crankshafts, however, to alter the firing order ; for instance, the 90 ° V6 engine configuration, in older days sometimes derived by using six cylinders of a V8 engine with what is basically a shortened version of the V8 crankshaft, produces an engine with an inherent pulsation in the power flow due to the " missing " two cylinders.
) The inherent latency of the coding algorithm can be critical ; for example, when there is two-way transmission of data, such as with a telephone conversation, significant delays may seriously degrade the perceived quality.
A denormalised data model is not the same as a data model that has not been normalised, and denormalisation should only take place after a satisfactory level of normalisation has taken place and that any required constraints and / or rules have been created to deal with the inherent anomalies in the design.
An inherent problem with the arcane Wade – Giles use of apostrophes to differentiate aspiration is that many English readers do not understand it, which has resulted in the frequent mispronunciation of Taoism as instead of.
* Vowels other than the inherent a are written with diacritics ( termed matras ).

inherent and increasingly
By the early 1920s, however, the inherent limitations of this type of engine had rendered it obsolete, with the power output increasingly going into overcoming the air-resistance of the spinning engine itself.
The bulk approach has inherent limitations in addition to becoming increasingly demanding and expensive.
Modern passive crossovers increasingly incorporate equalization networks ( e. g., Zobel networks ) that compensate for the changes in impedance with frequency inherent in virtually all loudspeakers.
Having lived in Vienna and London, the latter city in particular being a major centre of the Enlightenment, Melo increasingly believed that the Society of Jesus, also known as the " Jesuits ", with their grip on science and education, were an inherent drag on an independent, Portuguese-style iluminismo.
It is a tenet of many Marxists groupings that crises are inevitable and will be increasingly severe until the contradictions inherent in the mismatch between the mode of production and the development of productive forces reach the final point of failure, determined by the quality of their leadership, the development of the consciousness of the various social classes, and other " subjective factors ".
Ever since, according to Elliott ( 2004 ), " the traditional life cycle approaches to systems development have been increasingly replaced with alternative approaches and frameworks, which attempted to overcome some of the inherent deficiencies of the traditional SDLC ".
On assuming power in 1888, Faisal ibn Turki gradually found his authority over the interior weakened as tribal leaders increasingly perceived his dependence on British advisers as an inherent weakness.
Increasingly, in acknowledgement of the methodological weaknesses, poor prognostic power, symptomatic variability and general weaknesses inherent in the diagnostic validity of the term schizophrenia, the psychological literature has increasingly tended to focus on specific or discrete symptoms or aspects associated with it.
Firstly, it became increasingly clear that the assumption of homogeneity inherent in Chomsky and Labov ´ s models was untenable.
Failure was now due not to the House of Lords but the inherent difficulties of the subject, as it became increasingly clear to the public generally that the easy denunciations of the act of 1902, which had played so large a part in the elections of 1906, were not so simple to carry into practice.

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