Sentences with phrase «other algorithms programmed»

And then as Snap's price fell, other algorithms programmed to contain investor losses also deepened the selloff.

Not exact matches

You may not use any computer program tools including, but not limited to, web spiders, bots, indexers, robots, crawlers, harvesters, or any other automatic device, program, algorithm or methodology, or any similar or equivalent manual process («Tools») to access, acquire, copy or monitor any portion of the Site or any content, or in any way reproduce or circumvent the navigational structure or presentation of the Site or any content, to obtain or attempt to obtain materials, documents or information through any means not purposely made available through the Site.
You may not use any «deep - link», «page - scrape», «robot», «spider» or other automatic device, program, algorithm or methodology, or any similar or equivalent manual process, to access, acquire, copy or monitor any portion of the Site, or in any way reproduce or circumvent the navigational structure or presentation of the Site, to obtain or attempt to obtain any materials, documents or information through any means not purposely made available to you through the Site.
h. Crawl or use other automated programs or algorithms to continuously download, search, scrape, extract, deep link, index or disrupt the normal function of the Publisher's websites or access to the Licensed Materials by other users.
While other already approved AI programs help doctors examine medical images, there's «not a specialist looking over the shoulder of [this] algorithm,» says Michael Abràmoff, who founded and heads a company that developed the system under FDA review, dubbed IDx - DR.
To encourage use of the model, Porter and Reich coded the model's algorithms in the R programming language and have made the software freely available to police departments, other law enforcement agencies and criminologists.
Intelligent Hybrid Systems is an edited collection of articles about computer systems that tries to combine the best of conventional programming with neural networks, genetic algorithms and other nonsymbolic methods.
We found that the SATé iterative alignment program (53, 54) yielded more reliable alignments than other algorithms for large - scale data, and we developed alignment - filtering algorithms to remove unaligned and incorrectly overaligned sequences (SM3).
• Decomposition • Abstraction • Basic Pseudocode • Arithmetic Operations • Relational Operators • Boolean Operators • Input and Output • Iteration • Selection • Nesting statements • Flowcharts • Trace Tables • Dealing with Arrays • Subroutines • Dealing with strings • ASCII and Unicode • Linear search • Binary Search • Compare the two search algorithms < • Bubble Sort • Merge Sort • Compare the two sort algorithms Other student workbooks in this series include: Programming Fundamentals of Data Representation GCSE revision student workbook Computer Systems GCSE revision student workbook Computer Networks GCSE revision student workbook Cyber Security GCSE revision student workbook Ethical, legal and environmental impacts GCSE workbook
It can be used to have students identify the algorithm, use of items such as strings and lists and other variables as well as procedural programming and as an example of the practical use of Tkinter to code the graphical user interface.
This PowerPoint presentation includes various fun activities based around: What programming is and why it is important Variables and constants BASIC Commands and their Scratch alternatives (PRINT, CLS, INPUT, END, REM, LET) Conditional Statements — IF THEN ELSE, SELECT CASE, GOTO Loops - FOR NEXT, DO WHILE, WHILE WEND Setting Real World programming challenges Combining programming with other topics ========================================================================= Part one, which contains various fun activities based around: Computational thinking (simplified)-- breaking down a bigger task into smaller steps and finding solutions Algorithms — Step - by - step ordered instructions Flow Charts — Graphical representations of algorithms Pseudocode — A half - code outline of a program written for humans to uAlgorithms — Step - by - step ordered instructions Flow Charts — Graphical representations of algorithms Pseudocode — A half - code outline of a program written for humans to ualgorithms Pseudocode — A half - code outline of a program written for humans to understand.
Table of contents: The Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 The copyright of algorithms The Computer Misuse Act 1990 The Data Protection Act 1998 The Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 The Freedom of Information Act 2000 Human Rights Act 1998 Hackers v crackers Wireless networking Cloud storage and cloud computing Asking ethical questions Data privacy Wearable technology Computer based implants Healthcare apps Review culture Environmental impact of technology Answering long exam questions Other workbooks in this series: * Fundamentals of Algorithms GCSE revision student workbook Programming Fundamentals of Data Representation GCSE revision student workbook * Computer Systems GCSE revision student workbook Fundamentals of Computer Networks GCSE revision student workbook Cyber Security GCSE revision studenalgorithms The Computer Misuse Act 1990 The Data Protection Act 1998 The Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 The Freedom of Information Act 2000 Human Rights Act 1998 Hackers v crackers Wireless networking Cloud storage and cloud computing Asking ethical questions Data privacy Wearable technology Computer based implants Healthcare apps Review culture Environmental impact of technology Answering long exam questions Other workbooks in this series: * Fundamentals of Algorithms GCSE revision student workbook Programming Fundamentals of Data Representation GCSE revision student workbook * Computer Systems GCSE revision student workbook Fundamentals of Computer Networks GCSE revision student workbook Cyber Security GCSE revision studenAlgorithms GCSE revision student workbook Programming Fundamentals of Data Representation GCSE revision student workbook * Computer Systems GCSE revision student workbook Fundamentals of Computer Networks GCSE revision student workbook Cyber Security GCSE revision student workbook
Then the other book outlets have algorithms that favor traditionally published books and authors who are in their special programs.
Some of the basic functions offered by MATLAB include matrix manipulations, implementation of computer algorithms, creating user interfaces, plotting of data and functions, and creating interfaces with programs written in other high - level programming languages like Java, C, C++, Python, and others as well.
HFT players (quant firms with more capital and computing power than any retail trader) program the algorithms to buy or sell a currency pair (or other instrument).
In the NinjaTrader Platform, the use of DLL's is not required since the advanced programming techniques in the algorithm allow us to see results in other strategies currently running in the same workspace.
- the game's shading mechanism has changed, which allows for increased gear texture quality - all graphical aspects and programming mechanisms have been built up from scratch for this sequel - maximum resolution is 1080p in TV mode - a bigger focus for Nintendo was the 60 frames per second - occasionally the resolution will be scaled down when there is too much ink displaying on the screen - Nintendo reduced the CPU load and refined the way to use CPU power effectively to maintain 60 fps in all matches - weapons were tweaked to let players be more creative by thinking about unique weapon characteristics and their best uses - weapons are designed to be effective when they are used during the right occasion - Special weapons are stronger than the original ones when used in the right situation, but weaker otherwise - the damage and effect of slowing down your movement when you step in the opponent's ink are reduced from original - you can jump up in rank if you're good enough, but only up until S - you can't jump up from C, B or A to S + - when you win battles in Ranked mode, the Ranked meter fills and your rank goes up when its fully filled - when you lose a battle, the gauge does not decrease, but the meter starts to crack - once the meter reaches its limit, it breaks - when the meter breaks, you have to start over again from the beginning or from a lower rank - highest rank is still S +, but if you fill up the Ranked meter, you get numbers after the alphabet such as «S +1», «S +2» and so on - maximum number is «S +50», but this number will not be displayed to your opponent - you are the only one to see it, and you can check it on your own status screen - Ranked Power is calculated by an algorithm to measure how strong each player is with minuteness - this will determine if a player's rank is worthy of receiving a big jump (like from «C» to «A»)- Ranked Power has no relation to your splat rate, and is more tied into to how well you lead your team to victory - you won't drop off more than one rank even if you play poorly - stage rotation time was changed to two hours - this was done because the devs expected people to play for an hour or so, but they found people play much longer - with Salmon Run, Nintendo considered how to implement a co-op oriented mode in a player - versus - player type of game - the devs will monitor how users are playing this mode to see if there's some tweaks they can throw in - more Salmon Run maps will be added in the future, but Nintendo wouldn't comment on adding more enemy types to the mode - rewards are changed each time Salmon Run is played - you can obtain rewards when playing locally, but not gear - originally Nintendo had an idea for this mode, but had no background setting, enemy designs, etc. - Inoue suggested that it should be salmon - themed - when Nintendo hosted the Splatfest that pit Callie against Marie, the development of Splatoon 2 had started - the devs had already decided to have the result reflected in the sequel - they even had an idea to announce the Splatfest with a phrase «Your choice will change the next Splatoon» - the timing to announce a sequel wasn't right, so they decided against this - they eventually released a series of short stories about the Squid Sisters to show how the Splatfest affected the sequel's story - Nintendo wouldn't say if Marina is an Octoling, and noted that Inklings are not paying attention to this too much - Inklings don't care about appearances, as long as everyone is doing something fresh - the Squid Sisters had composers who produced their songs, but Off the Hook are composing their music by themselves - Pearl is genius artist, but she couldn't find a right partner because she's a bit too edgy - she eventually found Marina as a partner though, and their chemistry is sparkling right now - Nintendo is planning a year of content updates for Splatoon 2 - when finished, the quantity of stages will be more than the original - some of the additional stages are totally new and some will be arranged stages from the first game - not all original stages will return and they are choosing stages based on the potential for them to be improved - Brella is shotgun-esque weapon, so the ink hits your opponent more if you are closer - it can shield damage when you open it, but the amount of damage has a limit and once it reaches it, it breaks - you can shoot ink, but you can't use the shield feature when it breaks - the shield won't prevent your allies ink - there are more new weapon categories which haven't been revealed yet - there are no other ranked modes outside of the three current options - the future holds any sort of possibility, but the devs didn't get specific about adding more content like that - for the modes, they adjusted the rule designs so that players will experience the more interesting aspects
In a not so distant «world without us» humans will be replaced by machines, Artificial Intelligences will be optimized by other AIs and algorithms will be programmed by self - learning...
I work and have worked with KNN, K means, Neural Networks, and various other algorithms as well as in: statdisk, SPSS, Excel, Rapidminer (new to Rapidminer though, very interesting) Octave, Matlab, and other programs looking at quantitative and statistical relationships / patterns.
I'm at a juncture where I'm going to briefly need substantial funding to free my focus from other financial pursuits for a few weeks so that I can focus deeply on programming the algorithms (which are already blueprinted conceptually).
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