Sentences with phrase «finely tune it»

(You may recall the last 1LE had the same size wheels and tires at all four corners, which some enthusiasts liked since they could rotate tires willy - nilly; Chevrolet decided not to go with matched tires on this all - new 1LE because the automaker wanted to more finely tune turn - in at the front and improve traction at the rear.)
Once the pedal firms up, it lets you finely tune braking response with foot pressure.
This Compass will be a truly worldwide model, being offered in over 100 countries, built in four countries, and available with five different engine options, three transmissions, and a host of tech integrations, giving consumers the ability to finely tune their perfect ride.
In the game, players choose between a number of different classes and can upgrade and modify their weapons and abilities to finely tune their gameplay.
We subsequently used a novel Design of Experiments approach to finely tune the optimal memory B cell expansion and differentiation conditions for human memory B cell subsets.
Activation of multiple signaling pathways may allow cells to finely tune expression of effector molecules as well as provide redundancy and resiliency.
For example, if you were testing a drug, or even monitoring the progression of the disease so that you could very finely tune the treatment to each individual patient, and so frequently and so quickly that you could prevent the loss of individual ganglion cells, you ultimately would be preserving vision.
By combining the silicon nitride with platinum heaters, they were able to very finely tune the rings and make them work in tandem with the single input laser.
One advantage of this method is that researchers can finely tune which cells are activated and in what part of the body.
Wardle says the combination of carbon nanotubes and multilayer coatings may help finely tune microfluidic devices to capture extremely small and rare particles, such as certain viruses and proteins.
More light leads to a greater flow of calcium, so the researchers are able to finely tune the calcium - dependent actions of immune cells to fight against invading pathogens or tumor cells.
Because of its ability to finely tune the signals it generates, an MRI can also show softer, more intertwined tissues — such as in the brain, spinal cord and musculoskeletal system — in rich detail.
If you imagine the American presidential election as a single constituency (for the sake of ease), both parties put up a wide range of candidates who, through the primary process, voters finely tune to the two best options.
Far more medical researchers are using our new understanding of genetics to finely tune cancer therapies or other treatments.
These cloud companies use ThousandEyes to help them discover when their cloud software fails to perform correctly for their customers so they can more finely tune their products.
The startup routinely prints objects in its labs and collects the data on those prints to finely tune its devices, using algorithms that help with the calculations, DeSimone said.
Previously available software was too clunky to create the finely tuned designs needed for denim, making physical prototypes necessary.
Success depends on relentless innovation, finely tuned competitive instincts and no shortage of clout (with suppliers, partners and media outlets).
By leveraging predictive analytics, companies can anticipate the wants and needs of their customers to create customized experiences — finely tuned for individual preferences.
Well - oiled or finely tuned, the business must work and keep working for both owners and consumers alike.
Always remember that mastering the art of negotiation means that your skills are so finely tuned that you can always orchestrate a win - win situation.
Never knowing which dad was going to arrive home, and having to respond quickly to either version, gave her a finely tuned radar for trouble.
Post-crisis economics introduced the public to macroprudential policy, or more finely tuned fiscal and regulatory measures meant to restrain risky behaviour in specific markets.
With Americans» attention more finely tuned to the political climate under U.S. President Donald Trump, brands that dove headfirst into that conversation generated the most reaction from viewers during Sunday's Super Bowl.
However, the Gear VR has its own built - in motion sensor, which is more finely tuned.
It arises from a patchwork of finely tuned features.
When behavior is successful our cells become finely tuned to what the animal was learning at the time while a failure shows little change in the brain or improvement in the monkey's behavior.
In fact, at this point my bullshit meter is a finely tuned instrument.
Sales is tough — which is why we exist: to provide you with a well - organized and finely tuned sales force fully dedicated to the growth of your business.
Companies proved from recent fights with the National Rifle Association and legislation targeting bathroom use by transgender people that they can be more finely tuned to public opinion than politicians.
What, or who, made the constants so finely tuned?
So I don't disagree with the notion that the universe here is finely tuned for life.
In a fully redeemed world, every community would have a finely tuned radar for distress and dispatch someone to arrive at our front door — casserole in hand — offering to pray before we've even tweeted our need.
It's finely tuned and yes there are many dangerous things out there in the universe, but are the planets just floating about, willy - nilly.
I think this is one of the reasons why I love midwives, they have a finely tuned bullshit detector and aren't afraid to call me on it.
Physicists marvel that the physical constants are so finely tuned to the requirements of life.
Grayling responds in a similar fashion to other modern evidences for God — for instance, the current scientific view that the universe is finely tuned to allow for the emergence of life.
This depends upon a number of very «finely tuned» values of certain physical laws.
One of Woody's most finely tuned and honed pieces of humor appeared last summer in the New Republic.
«This book is for everybody who can't do the denial, reductionist route which says «you are just a finely tuned collection of atoms and this whole thing is just a material accident»,» Bell says.
The odds of the finely tuned universe we live in coming about by chance are so unlikely that it's difficult to conceive of the astronomically large numbers involved.
The universe isn't finely tuned for life.
Another finely tuned constant is the strong nuclear force (the force that holds atoms together).
The Fundamental Cosmological Constants are accurately measured with which the universe is finely tuned to accommodate for human life.
By the time you got there, the opposition was well orchestrated and finely tuned, and in less than a week your leader was strung up, and you were smart enough to head for the hills.
The key to human nature therefore lies in both the organic inheritance of evolution through the brain, which is instinct with natural law, harmonic order and finely tuned mutual balance, and in the free, dynamic seeking of truth and values and their free administration by the directly created spirit.
A finely tuned sensitivity to human need and suffering may be a sufficient guide to action for the optimist who believes that the state can make everybody happy, but the realist who understands that every state rests on power and coercion is the one who most needs an ideal of power guided by justice.
Beating pillows, crying, sobbing, shouting, swearing, screaming, embracing, they embarked upon what purported to be a great voyage of discovery, from which they received a finely tuned method enabling them to reach their human potential.
At a day conference on the «Multi-verse» at Emmanuelle College Cambridge, the Cape Town Professor George Ellis, as agnostic bio-chemist from South Africa, suggested that the theory of multiple, even infinite, universes, of which our finely tuned one is just one, might be useful as an explanatory tool but not in terms of contributing to the theistic debate.
Having quoted the invariably profound, long - term Sunday Times journalist, Bryan Appleyard, to the effect that «matter evolved in an elaborate, finely tuned conspiracy to produce air - breathing, carbon based life forms possessed of self - consciousness» he goes on to state that «Living matter, or living beings, are purpose driven».
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