Sentences with phrase «points scattered»

By putting the controller in the cloud, Ruckus removes it from the physical network and can hook tens or even hundreds of thousands of individual access points scattered throughout the world onto the same virtual network.
The second was to capture key points scattered around the map.
The map has one circular lane with five control points scattered across it.
Luckily, the game gives you unlimited lives and most levels have save points scattered throughout them so things stay manageable.
It's a vast sprawl of absolutely gorgeous terrain and none of it matters because I can instantly teleport to any one of multiple spawn points scattered throughout the world for maximum convenience.
There are a number of vantage points scattered around for players to utilise as they wish.
Cardholders then end up with miles and points scattered across many different airline and credit card programs.
More often than not, we brand - hop when it comes to accommodations and end up with a few scant points scattered across a half - dozen programs.
It has its headquarters in the Baron Bliss Institute in Belize City and 74 service points scattered throughout the country.
So it's back to switch the companion load out which can be done either in Joule's crawler acting as her base or at fast travel points scattered around the world.
Over the whole 0 - 500 C range, the point scatter about the fit yielded an estimate of average systematic error in T = (+ / --RRB- 29 C.
Further than that, though, it was straightforward to take McCrae's data for Cape Cod and Florida in his Table X, replot it, and determine the methodological point scatter due to systematic error.
More relevant to SST's, I evaluated point scatter in the 0 - 200 C data separately, getting the fitted equation: 1000 * ln - alpha = 2.74 * (10 ^ 6 / T)-2.77, r ^ 2 = 0.99999.
These variables can impact a dO - 18 paleo - temperature reconstruction in unknown ways, and are responsible for the point scatter one sees in the experimental data.

Not exact matches

Canada's experience looks to be typical of that of other OECD countries; the Canadian data points lie in the middle of that scatter plot.
At that point, the company had built about 60 prototypes, and some were scattered around the premises; employees hopped on them to quickly dart from one end of the factory to the other.
Captain America: The Winter Soldier, this year's top - grossing film so far, came out in early - April and the scattering of big movies around the calendar is one reason why all 2014 films have only grossed about 5.4 % less than all films had last year at this point.
If the other trail had stopped or scattered at the intercept point then we'd have a photograph that shows a successful intercept.
Solutions is now very much on everybody's lips, but the initiatives are scattered, so we need a focal point.
He has written three books & poems and two of prose, including the forthcoming Scattering Point: The World in a Mennonite Eye.
The German - speaking peoples were scattered among multiple principalities, and spilled over into Russia, Central Europe, and - a point of major contention for France - Alsace - Lorraine.
All that we can say with confidence, however, is that our earliest knowledge of humankind takes us back only to the point where humans were already scattered into groups, living a tribal existence, each with its own language and culture.
The hitherto scattered fragments of humanity, being at length brought into close contact, are beginning to interpenetrate to the point of reacting economically and psychically upon each other; with the result, given the fundamental relationship between biological compression and the heightening of consciousness, of an irresistible rise within us and around us of the level of Reflection.
In the first place, points denoting this new human type will be found to be scattered more or less all over the thinking face of the globe.
But if there were really no answer we should be obliged to conclude that, although the course of Evolution was «directed» up to the emergence of Life, beyond that point all that goes on is a scattering m every direction.
However, all these pieces of information from various sources, though very scanty, point to the fact that there were scattered communities of St. Thomas Christians (Nestorians as they were referred to in some of the documents) in different parts of the continent.
He hailed the 1938 conference as a crucial turning point, where it was made clear that the goal of Christian mission is not to establish «outposts of Western Christianity scattered throughout the world.»
From my vantage point, several food and beverage industry trends will continue to roll through 2017, while a handful of scattered ideas find fertile ground and growth potential.
That's the challenge meteorologists have predicting how scattered storms will impact a single point or, in this case, a track on that grid.
The film itself is a bit scattered — in trying to cover so much ground, it sometimes feels as though the story itself is all over the place, and some of the points it makes (like the societal pressure on men to eat meat as a reflection of their manhood) are much stronger than others.
He seems a bit scattered on the pitch and although there's no point writing off Fabianski at this stage (he's only 23 after all) but I think he's a good season or two away from claiming the number one spot.
'' At every point that we strive to make progress, we are the same persons to scatter it.
Tuesday's vote saw scattered technical glitches as voters used the new ballot - scanning machines, and some voters also complained about the miniscule 6 - point type on the paper ballots.
Glories occur at a point in the sky opposite the sun when light scatters off tiny liquid particles, usually water in our clouds, refracting into rings.
The departure points of the canals are not scattered haphazard over the surface, but bear general relations to its definite features.
At each point on the particle's path, other lasers illuminate it with red, green or blue light, which the particle scatters in all directions.
Using neutron scattering experiments at the BER II research reactor, Manfred Reehuis and Michael Tovar were successful in determining the structural and magnetic properties for each of the mixed crystal specimens over quite a wide temperature range, from near the zero point of the Kelvin temperature scale to above 900 K.
Where before the gyroscopes had been neatly lined up in equally spaced rows, like the lattice pattern in a crystal, Irvine and team scattered the points randomly around.
«I worked out how much scattering and straggling would occur, and realized that much of the ionization would be deposited in a volume at the end of a narrow beam not much larger than the eraser on a pencil — and with very little exposure of the skin at the point of entry,» Wilson recalled in a draft for a speech.
It was some 7 billion years before the universe expanded to the point where matter was too scattered to keep the expansion slowing.
The central point of the process is the act of scattering and modification.
That's because some of the returning light scattered from points on the surface has farther to go and throws the collective wave out of phase.
They are intended to scatter incident radiation in such a way that all the contributions add constructively at the site of the driven element when the antenna is pointed toward the transmitter.
The nanotubes enable incident light to be trapped and focused at the numerous contact points and crevices, allowing the Raman - scattered light to pass through.
While the scattered data by themselves are invaluable, separate data points are hard to interpret, as different methods used at various sites can obscure larger patterns.
However, in 4D - STEM, the researchers use a high - speed electron detector to record where each electron scatters, from each scanned point.
The U.S. has 104 reactors scattered throughout the country, producing 20 percent of the nation's electricity — and 70 percent of our electricity that emits relatively little CO2 pollution, a point emphasized by U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu.
By beaming high - voltage electrons through a sample and recording how the electrons scatter off the nuclei, STEM builds up a picture point by point.
They pointed out that if magnetic or electric fields that varied over space were applied to atoms, the scattering force caused by the laser light would not necessarily be proportional to the light intensity.
Instead, the project can start out by testing participants» DNA for so - called single nucleodtide polymorphism (SNPs), common mutations scattered along the genome that can point to disease risk genes.
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