Sentences with phrase «probably read the data»

Still, I think you can probably read the data any way you want and then find additional data that supports your position.

Not exact matches

In fact, without the software, you would probably miss the most important data you need and would have a hard time understanding the... read more →
This thermos has the biggest memory data; it can store up 32 reading, which can be quite impressive if you need to keep track of your child's bodily temp.If you are looking for a simple baby thermometer to use, this is probably one of the best purchase you will ever make.
Some unknown number of the 1.6 million tests started were by students starting their 2nd test; probably in the 400K - 500K range based on the test completion data... Read More
In that piece, Jellybooks» Rhomberg writes: The availability of reading data is probably causing more angst than any other because it strikes at... Read More
I LOVE KISSMetrics, and all the work your team puts in (Kristi Hines» posts probably some of the best reading in my recent history, she's plugging KM time and again and I can't get enough of the data...).
The ratings, reviews, and personal reading history data available from Goodreads — the largest of the social reading communities — are probably why Amazon moved to buy Goodreads in the first place.
Also, KU is good for gathering data (such as how often people read books, how much time they spend, how far into a book they get, etc.), but that data will unfortunately probably never be shared with authors.
As you probably already know, the recent data breach of the credit bureau Equifax has exposed the personal information of over 143 million Americans.1 Likely to be included in that group is a surprising number of college... Read Article about How the Equifax breach can affect college students
-- I have moved the most important excel data gathered during my «normal» research process to my checklist: although data is more or less the same, there is lot more focus now and probably in the future helps me to «get in to the core» faster — Gathering lot more data from footnotes: reading them with lot more focus — Added points where I have to write short comments about each observation with date - > easier to backtrack thinking and mistakes.
As you probably already know, the recent data breach of the credit bureau... Read Article about How the Equifax breach can affect college students
In Grantland, Brian Phillips wrote: «Probably no one alive is a better novelist than Jonathan Franzen, and this is frustrating because his novels are awful, excellent but awful, books you read quickly and remember ponderously, books of exhaustive craft and yet a weird, spiraling cluelessness about the data they exhaustively collate.»
Okay here's what I will say: Anybody reading The New York Times, watching too much mainstream news or posting «Now This» bullshit is probably just as ignorant of actual scientific data as «deniers.»
Its made worse by there being so few genuinely «old» stations (let alone continous, and untainted by uhi or a statrion move) so the data for say Albania (first readings 1951) is being borrowed from (probably) Bologna in order to stretch it back to 1750.
«And having read all of these documents (many times over), we're not convinced that anyone should read them, other than to confirm what you probably already know: A lot of data is being collected about you, and it's not
Even if you have read our previous posts on data security and encryption, your computer data is probably still at risk.
You can probably find similar information by reading through the data and informative articles they have posted on their websites.
The most scary looking one is probably «Read and change all your data on the websites you visit».
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