Sentences with phrase «spike on graph»

We had the good fortune of launching in the less - competitive environment of late 2012, but even so, almost every sales spike on that graph is tied to a specific opportunity we managed to seize by staying in really good touch with our contacts at Steam, GOG, Kongregate, and the other stores.
Anomalies appear as upward spikes on a graph line.
The higher the spikes on the graph get, the more danger you are in, so crouching and sneaking is very much the order of the day.

Not exact matches

The new agreement will allow Bloomberg to offer its customers a live feed of curated tweets, alerts on activity that could signal a spike or other important chatter, historical graphing and sentiment analysis.
So, if you notice a spike in reach on a certain day, click on that point of the graph to see the specific content and note how people engaged.
This graph, from Google Trends, shows both players experiencing a spike in search interest on September 12th, but it was Martial that made the biggest impact, with roughly double the number of searches compared with Ronaldo!
In 2005, Rep. Joe Barton, R - Texas, called Mann before Congress to testify about his now ubiquitous «hockey - stick» graph, showing temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere over the past millennia, with an abrupt spike upward at the end showing human influence on the climate.
By this we mean the graphs often take the same shape and have spikes on similar days, and any averages are consistent across all platforms.
Many seasoned climate scientists and energy experts, some of whom walked the halls here during the meeting like an admonitory Greek chorus, still expressed optimism that nations generating the century - long spike in emissions from burning fuels and forests were poised to divert from paths long labeled on graphs as «business as usual.»
This graph got far less attention this week than a much sharper year - on - year spike in worry and the highest level of belief (in 15 years of tracking) that humans are the main cause.
This is a ridiculous graph that ignores the stop / start nature of technological progress and adoption and falls in the arena of pure assertion (e.g.there ought to be major spikes corresponding to the widespread postwar adoption of automobiles, etc.) This was discussed with Pratt some time ago and any conclusions based on it are indefensible imaginings.
If the oscillation is ENSO - PDO, which is what I think it is, then the rates, which end just after 2000 on th graph, would dip a bit for the years called the warming hiatus, and then spike to higher levels.
Since year - to - year spikes in the proxy data may just be noise that brings in other confounding factors, scientists average them out to get a nice smooth graph that is meaningful, not on a year - to - year or decade - to - decade level, but on a scale of centuries.
Yet Queensland, with only one big solar power station and no large wind farms at all, had far more price spikes than South Australia, as shown in the graph from RenewEconomy reproduced on the right.
However, the same graph you're referring to clearly shows a major spike similar to the one we are on happening around 1,000 years ago about the time of the MWP.
The graph that Gavin posts as a response to # 7 (ignoring for the moment the spike pasted on) is derived from a handful of non-random locations around the planet and not sampled at 700 times / year rather maybe once, or often once every hundred years or so.
The «fuzz» on this graph is because the absorption actually takes the form of thousands of closely spaced partially overlapping spikes.
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