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tradeoff and prediction
One needs to have a tradeoff between prediction performance and scalability.

tradeoff and was
The tradeoff was that the screen could not be located in that 8 KB.
However the Greeks ' understanding was limited to the statics of simple machines ; the balance of forces, and did not include dynamics ; the tradeoff between force and distance, or the concept of work.
Multipass NLQ was abandoned, as most manufacturers felt the marginal quality improvement did not justify the tradeoff in speed.
However the Greeks ' understanding was limited to the statics of simple machines ; the balance of forces, and did not include dynamics ; the tradeoff between force and distance, or the concept of work.
Because of a tradeoff between area covered and ground resolution, not all reconnaissance satellites have been designed for high resolution ; the KH-5-ARGON program had a ground resolution of 140 meters and was intended for mapmaking.
As high-power solid-state amplifiers are available, a common tradeoff is to sacrifice efficiency and produce a relatively small enclosure capable of reproducing low frequencies, but requiring a lot of power ; in the days of vacuum tube amplifiers a 35W amplifier was large and expensive, and large, efficient, enclosures were more often used.
Under Sprite, this tradeoff is particularly useful because most read access was cached anyway — that is, Sprite systems would typically perform fewer reads than a normal Unix system.
In the 1986 second version a tradeoff was made: while traditional phraseology-absent from the 1970 edition-was restored to the New Testament, several non-traditional gender-neutral terms were incorporated.
The Science Power Platform ( SPP ) () was a planned Russian element of the International Space Station ( ISS ) that was intended to be delivered to the ISS by a Russian Proton rocket or Zenit rocket ( it was originally designed to be part of Mir-2 ) but was shifted to launch by Space Shuttle as part as a tradeoff agreement on other parts of the ISS.
However, in 1968, Milton Friedman and Edmund Phelps argued that this apparent tradeoff was illusory.
These systems were designed to provide decoders to cable operators at low cost ; a serious tradeoff was made in security.
Other storage tubes were able to store greyscale / halftoned images ; the tradeoff was usually a much-reduced storage time.
The tradeoff was that only ½ the block's circumference was threaded, reducing the security accordingly.
A few years later JPEG was invented, allowing an almost arbitrary tradeoff between latency and image quality.
The theory of this technique was first pioneered by Philippe Oechslin as a fast form of time-memory tradeoff, which he implemented in the Windows password cracker Ophcrack.

tradeoff and sometimes
For practical filters, a custom design is sometimes desirable, that can offer the best tradeoff between different design criteria, which may include component count and cost, as well as filter response characteristics.
This is sometimes done in real time to optimize the power-performance tradeoff.
One tradeoff to this is that the “ lowest skilled and least employable ” people are sometimes excluded from an egalitarian labor market, and must instead rely on government aid in order to survive ( p. 563 ).
The tradeoff is sometimes mistakenly identified as occurring at the intersection of the marginal revenue curves for the competing segments.

tradeoff and other
Northeast Jefferson County, including High Ridge, has been cited by University of Missouri geography professor emeritus Walter F. Schroeder as a " grand experiment " in governance by taxing districts, in which functions normally performed by a municipality ( fire, sewer, ambulance, water ) are instead controlled by elected district trustees, with other functions ( police, planning and zoning, roads, real estate matters ) left to county-wide ordinance, with the tradeoff being lower taxes than an incorporated region.
Lock resolution is a tradeoff between performance and accuracy — by blocking updates at the page level, for example, some updates will be blocked which do not in fact conflict with updates made by other transactions, but performance will be improved in comparison with record level locks.
There seems to be a tradeoff with many other variables in a life cycle analysis, which would suggest that 7 stories ( around fifty dwelling units per hectare for optimum transport petroleum use ( Kenworthy )) is the optimum density in T1 urban areas, the city of Paris being an example ( Mehaffy ).
The tradeoff is that compared to other solutions, more code is initially downloaded to the client ( code can be cached on the client ), and FormFaces does not yet support XML Schema validation.
There is clearly a tradeoff involved, since on the one hand a predator may hesitate to attack a large group of animals, while on the other a large group offers an easily detected target.

tradeoff and players
Although the tone of fiberglass models tends to be thinner and less " warm " ( earning them the nicknames " Plastic Bugle ", " White Trash ", " Toilet Bowels ", and " Tupperware " among players in some ensembles ), it is considered acceptable by the high schools in which the instrument is most common due to the tradeoff in durability, cost, and weight.
Its several properties, including the tradeoff between harvesting it and the damage that it does to infantry that come in contact with it, make game strategy more complex for players.

tradeoff and would
These attacks improve on the well-known time-space tradeoff attack on stream ciphers, which with Trivium's 288-bit internal state would take 2 < sup > 144 </ sup > steps, and show that a variant on Trivium which made no change except to increase the key length beyond the 80 bits mandated by eSTREAM Profile 2 would not be secure.

tradeoff and no
Indeed, Winograd showed that the DFT can be computed with only irrational multiplications, leading to a proven achievable lower bound on the number of multiplications for power-of-two sizes ; unfortunately, this comes at the cost of many more additions, a tradeoff no longer favorable on modern processors with hardware multipliers.
However, they also show that in models with more than one market imperfection ( for example, frictions in adjusting the employment level, as well as sticky prices ), there is no longer a ' divine coincidence ', and instead there is a tradeoff between stabilizing inflation and stabilizing employment.
This is a relevant tradeoff, but there can be no question that the degree of devaluation in the Asian countries is excessive, both from the viewpoint of the individual countries, and from the viewpoint of the international system.
As a design tradeoff, there is no support for some Java language features ( as mentioned above ), and size limitations.
However, no algorithm can make this judgment perfectly, so there is often a tradeoff made between noise removal and preservation of fine, low-contrast detail that may have characteristics similar to noise.

tradeoff and longer
Straightforward acidic conditions can be used if acid-sensitive functional groups are not an issue ; sulfuric acid can be used ; softer acids can be used with a tradeoff of longer reaction times.

tradeoff and be
Unfortunately there may be a tradeoff between goodness ( speed ) and elegance ( compactness )— an elegant program may take more steps to complete a computation than one less elegant.
However, it may be in one form or another including the possible tradeoff of foreign control of assets.
While nations often strive for substantive harmony to facilitate cross-national distribution, philosophical differences about the optimal extent of regulation can be a hindrance ; more restrictive regulations seem appealing on an intuitive level, but critics decry the tradeoff cost in terms of slowing access to life-saving developments.
The degree of compression can be adjusted, allowing a selectable tradeoff between storage size and image quality.
Good learning algorithms therefore automatically adjust the bias / variance tradeoff based on the amount of data available and the apparent complexity of the function to be learned.
The tradeoff is that this feature puts additional CPU demand on the Load Balancer and it is a feature which could be done by web servers instead.
The tradeoff between sprawl and economic development continues to be debated throughout the city and the surrounding area.
The current trend nevertheless appears to be towards taking full advantage of this fully automated method, despite the tradeoff in efficiency-because it is claimed that it makes programming easier.
All procedures for picking a passphrase involve a tradeoff between security and ease of use ; security should be at least " adequate " while not " too seriously " annoying users.
However, according to the NAIRU, exploiting this short-run tradeoff will raise inflation expectations, shifting the short-run curve rightward to the " New Short-Run Phillips Curve " and moving the point of equilibrium from B to C. Thus the reduction in unemployment below the " Natural Rate " will be temporary, and lead only to higher inflation in the long run.
From this labor-leisure tradeoff model, the substitution and income effects of various changes in price caused by welfare benefits, labor taxation, or tax credits can be analyzed.
This appears to be a tradeoff: it is easier to construct visplanes as vertical strips, but because of the nature of how the floor and ceiling textures appear it is easier to draw them as horizontal strips.
" The tradeoff for TTL advertisers is that though use of the internet to find out extra things about a game might be enjoyable, gamers will not enjoy being given too much of a run-around with too obtrusive advertising to obtain important details about the game.
This prevents the connection from becoming saturated so that the server will still be responsive under heavy load, with the tradeoff that file transfer speed is reduced.

0.403 seconds.