Sentences with phrase «largest distribution point»

The Island's largest distribution point, in Inwood, also lost much of its capacity.

Not exact matches

Startup costs are minimal and basically provide equipment for a larger scale and quickly establish distribution points through the larger chains.
He has argued that no democracy has ever suffered a famine — a striking instance of his larger point that many issues of distribution can not be analyzed in economic terms alone.
Following the explosive success of its introductory 2014 vintage, Popcorn Cellars is poised to release its 2015 Chardonnay to larger distribution channels SONOMA, Calif., August 2, 2016 — Popcorn Cellars announced today its second vintage, the 2015 Popcorn Chardonnay, will be expanding its distribution channels nationally through the support of sales and marketing company Vintage Point -LSB-...]
It has sales of around Eur600 million in a fast - growing market and operates the country's largest distribution platform with 30 storage hubs serving 70,000 points of sales.
This Point of Distribution (POD) Exercise, in a true emergency, would identify sites to dispense potentially lifesaving medicine to the public when a large portion of the community's health is at risk.
Our light scattering set - up can measure the light scattering intensity at a very large number of angles (that is the equivalent of a cascade impactor filters), so it can construct a particle size distribution plot of a very large number of points.
Dana Goldstein points out that New York City has had this particular fight before, but in most districts the distribution of evaluation ratings isn't public information, so communities by and large haven't had this discussion yet.
Activities to help learners of secondary mathematics to interpret frequency graphs, cumulative frequency graphs and box and whisker plots for large samples and to see how a large number of data points can result in the graph being approximated by a continuous distribution.
How powerful would Amazon remain in light of other large online bookstores and distribution points if ALL books pubbed by NY were gone from Amazon?
The release included a very interesting point towards the end of the report that speaks to an issue much larger than book distribution, this time involving traditionally published author Suzanne Collins and her Hunger Games trilogy and several other authors:
«Offer of Distribution Points to a Larger Change» adds to the discussion.
This might eventually be the case with other, larger publishers at some point which, at the very least, may begin limiting their print distribution on Amazon.»
Sync your point of sale system with one of the largest book inventories and distribution networks in the world.
Given that Hachette often cites print / storage / distribution costs to justify a larger share of p - book revenues in their negotiations with retailers, the minimal costs for producing and distributing e-books is a legitimate point to be considered.
Extra points if: Retirees can also improve their portfolios» positioning by strategically pruning their RMDs from holdings that have grown too large and / or are overvalued; once they've liquidated or reduced the position, they can then direct the proceeds to charity via the qualified charitable distribution.
Bollinger points out that Wells Fargo can survive the flap in the long run because it has diversified revenue sources, market share in key financial products, a large national distribution network and a cheap base of deposits.
At this point I'm thinking that it might be worth taking a larger position AFTER the initial distribution is made, as that will provide much more leverage on the upside.
«Mural» set the precedent for the scale of Pollock's celebrated all - over drip - paintings (with their even distribution of compositional interest across an entire large surface), encouraged by a February 1947 review by Clement Greenberg in The Nation, where he wrote: «Pollock points a way beyond the easel, beyond the mobile, framed picture, to the mural.»
The ``... uneven spatial distribution, many missing data points, and a large number of non-climatic biases varying in time and space» all contribute inaccuracies to to the global temperature record — as do errors in orbital decay corrections, limb - corrections, diurnal corrections, and hot - target corrections, all of which rely on measurements (+ - inherent errors), in the satellite temperature records.
Warming must occur below the tropopause to increase the net LW flux out of the tropopause to balance the tropopause - level forcing; there is some feedback at that point as the stratosphere is «forced» by the fraction of that increase which it absorbs, and a fraction of that is transfered back to the tropopause level — for an optically thick stratosphere that could be significant, but I think it may be minor for the Earth as it is (while CO2 optical thickness of the stratosphere alone is large near the center of the band, most of the wavelengths in which the stratosphere is not transparent have a more moderate optical thickness on the order of 1 (mainly from stratospheric water vapor; stratospheric ozone makes a contribution over a narrow wavelength band, reaching somewhat larger optical thickness than stratospheric water vapor)(in the limit of an optically thin stratosphere at most wavelengths where the stratosphere is not transparent, changes in the net flux out of the stratosphere caused by stratospheric warming or cooling will tend to be evenly split between upward at TOA and downward at the tropopause; with greater optically thickness over a larger fraction of optically - significant wavelengths, the distribution of warming or cooling within the stratosphere will affect how such a change is distributed, and it would even be possible for stratospheric adjustment to have opposite effects on the downward flux at the tropopause and the upward flux at TOA).
This model could be used as a starting point in the development of a GCM parameterization of a the ice mixing - ratio probability distribution function and cloud amount, if a means of diagnosing the depth of the saturated layer and the standard deviation of cloud depth from basic large - scale meterological parameters could be determined.
For instance, a posterior distribution based on a uniform prior for an unbounded positive quantity is not valid when (as is always the case) you have reason to think that, past a certain point, large values of the parameter are highly implausible.
One might (or might not) argue for such a relation if the models were empirically adequate, but given nonlinear models with large systematic errors under current conditions, no connection has been even remotely established for relating the distribution of model states under altered conditions to decision - relevant probability distributions... There may well exist thresholds, or tipping points (Kemp 2005), which lie within this range of uncertainty.
At this point, the regional outlook on ice conditions indicates that the large - scale weather patterns, which dominated in August with cooler conditions and advection of ice into the eastern North American Arctic, can also help explain much of the observed ice distribution at the local level.
The most probable outcome (at least on the 100 year time scale) has risks that are probably manageable, but as Marty Weitzman at Harvard has pointed out, we need to pay attention to the tail of the risk distribution, because the economic and societal risks can be very large there.
But at the time of her speech, only two percent of the fruits and vegetables coming thru the Hunts Point market, one of the largest food distribution centers in the world, is produced in New York.
... a [large] corporation may well be too large to be the most efficient instrument of production and distribution, and, in the second place, whether it has exceeded the point of greatest economic efficiency or not, it may be too large to be tolerated among the people who desire to be free.
The usual factors to explain why books remain print - bound include the preference of many for the «feel» of a book (and the ease of flipping through pages); the fact that e-books are usually only best read on a large monitor (on a desktop), making them less portable than a print version; the lack of content in e-books; and the lack of a market and established distribution methods, a point made earlier on SLAW through a posting by John Davis.
CoStar's research pointed out that major industrial developers, such as Prologis Inc (NYSE: PLD), have been building larger distribution / warehouse and e-commerce fulfillment facilities.
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