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term and automated
The lack of moving parts makes them appropriate for long term use in exposed automated weather stations and weather buoys where the accuracy and reliability of traditional cup-and-vane anemometers is adversely affected by salty air or large amounts of dust.
The term theoretical chemistry may be defined as a mathematical description of chemistry, whereas computational chemistry is usually used when a mathematical method is sufficiently well developed that it can be automated for implementation on a computer.
The term is usually applied to the analysis performed by an automated tool, with human analysis being called program understanding, program comprehension or code review.
The term " near real-time " or " nearly real-time " ( NRT ), in telecommunications and computing, refers to the time delay introduced, by automated data processing or network transmission, between the occurrence of an event and the use of the processed data, such as for display or feedback and control purposes.
The term is generally used only to describe systems serving relatively small areas such as airports, downtown districts or theme parks, but is sometimes applied to considerably more complex automated systems.
Now, however, the term " people mover " is generic, and may use technologies such as monorail, duorail, automated guideway transit or maglev.
The terms, however, are distinct and mean different things to traditional telecommunications professionals, whereas emerging telephony and VoIP professionals often use the term IVR as a catch-all to signify any kind of telephony menu, even a basic automated attendant.
In Siemens official site, VAL is advertised " first fully automated light metro ", in which the term " light metro " can be traced back to Moscow Metro Butovskaya Light Metro Line.
Mastercam's name is a double entendre: it implies mastery of CAM ( computer-aided manufacturing ), which involves today's latest machine tool control technology ; and it simultaneously pays homage to yesterday's machine tool control technology by echoing the older term master cam, which referred to the main cam or model that a tracer followed in order to control the movements of a mechanically automated machine tool.
It is not clear when the term generative was first used, although Boden and Edmonds have noted the use of the term " generative art " in the broad context of automated computer graphics in the 1960s, beginning with artwork exhibited by Georg Nees and Nake in 1965:
Rebuilding the Cowley plant to include " new automated body building facilities " saved £ 2. 00 in transport costs per car for bodies that no longer needed to be transported from the corporation's Swindon plant and in the longer term further transport costs were saved by concentrating assembly of the model at a single plant, rather than splitting it between plants at Cowley and Longbridge.
The term " tote board " comes from the colloquialism for " totalizator " ( or " totalisator "), the name for the automated system which runs parimutuel betting, calculating payoff odds, displaying them, and producing tickets based on incoming bets.
In the short term, the greater the fraction of automated lanes, the lower the cost of operation ( once the capital costs of automating are amortized ).
In the people mover role the term " automated people mover " ( APM ) is sometimes used, although this distinction is relatively rare because most people movers are automated.
Because of their use of automated operation and third-rail power, however, they are unsuitable for the unprotected street-level tramways that the term usually indicates in Europe and North America.
The term was introduced by Mark Gubrud in 1997 in a discussion of the implications of fully automated military production and operations.
DUT boards are used in automated integrated circuit testing where the term DUT stands for device under test, referring to the circuit being tested.
The term is generally used with manual or visual techniques such as the use of intersecting visual or radio position lines rather than the use of more automated and accurate electronic methods such as GPS.
The term " people mover ," now in wider use to describe many forms of normally automated public transport, was first coined as the name for this attraction.
Furr used the term in the USENET newsgroup news. admin. policy to describe an out-of-control automated robo-moderation system known as ARMM.
A related secondary meaning of the term is any automated music stream — the usual format of cable only " stations ".
The term Energy Management System can also refer to a computer system which is designed specifically for the automated control and monitoring of those electromechanical facilities in a building which yield significant energy consumption such as heating, ventilation and lighting installations.

term and information
The term allocution differs from distribution as distribution implies that the original party loses some kind of control over the information.
As such, it can be seen as connecting other disciplinary approaches for investigating ancient astronomy: astroarchaeology ( an obsolete term for studies that draw astronomical information from the alignments of ancient architecture and landscapes ), history of astronomy ( which deals primarily with the written textual evidence ), and ethnoastronomy ( which draws on the ethnohistorical record and contemporary ethnographic studies ).
Kernighan's term is used to indicate that WYSIWYG systems might throw away information in a document that could be useful in other contexts.
Building on the recognition of the importance of information transmission, accumulation and processing in biological systems, in 1978 Paulien Hogeweg, coined the term " Bioinformatics " to refer to the study of information processes in biotic systems.
At the beginning of the " genomic revolution ", the term bioinformatics was re-discovered to refer to the creation and maintenance of a database to store biological information such as nucleotide sequences and amino acid sequences.
Paulien Hogeweg and Ben Hesper defined the term in 1978 to refer to " the study of information processes in biotic systems ".
The term primary memory is used for the information in physical systems which are fast ( i. e. RAM ), as a distinction from secondary memory, which are physical devices for program and data storage which are slow to access but offer higher memory capacity.
* Commander critical information requirement-a term in the US military
In computer and information science contexts, especially, the term ' concept ' is often used in unclear or inconsistent ways.
The term percipient refers to the person receiving information and was coined by Robinson.
Now ubiquitous, in current usage the term " cyberspace " stands for the global network of interdependent information technology infrastructures, telecommunications networks and computer processing systems.
The term computer system security means the collective processes and mechanisms by which sensitive and valuable information and services are protected from publication, tampering or collapse by unauthorized activities or untrustworthy individuals and unplanned events respectively.
The term clairvoyance ( from French clair meaning " clear " and voyance meaning " vision ") is used to refer to the ability to gain information about an object, person, location or physical event through means other than the known human senses, a form of extra-sensory perception.
* 1988 — Barry Devlin and Paul Murphy publish the article An architecture for a business and information system in IBM Systems Journal where they introduce the term " business data warehouse ".
With the increasing complexities of the information age, consultants and executives have found the term useful to describe the design of business processes as well as manufacturing processes.
Full information on element definitions and term relationships can be found in the Dublin Core Metadata Registry.
The term has also been used to describe the analysis of the genetic code information encoded in DNA-see the Human Genome Project article for more on this.
They asserted that organized patterns of information stored in long term memory ( chunks ) mediated experts ' rapid encoding and superior retention.
The second principle, the retrieval structure principle states that experts develop memory mechanisms called retrieval structures to facilitate the retrieval of information stored in long term memory.
The term implies acquisition of information by means external to the basic limiting assumptions of science, such as that organisms can only receive information from the past to the present.
Forgetting ( retention loss ) refers to apparent loss of information already encoded and stored in an individual's long term memory.
According to this theory, short term memory ( STM ) can only retain information for a limited amount of time, around 15 to 30 seconds unless it is rehearsed.
These theories encompass the loss of information already retained in long term memory or the inability to encode new information again.

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