Sentences with phrase «tiny subset of»

There are hundreds of third - party keyboards for the iPhone and iPad, and this is just a tiny subset of my favorite visually creative ones.
Only 300 people were playing at that point, yet Carpenter teased a surprise giveaway for only a tiny subset of players after the 10th question.
Also, everything that I and others write on climate change is just a tiny subset of the overall flow of news, most of which has nothing to do with improving the planet.
Joselit writes, «There is an entire political economy of image circulation, which should be of major concern to contemporary art,» adding, «It's very important to remember that what we recognize as global is a tiny subset of world art.»
The way the game is designed they have nullified the whole point of doing special operations except for a tiny subset of people who don't want to play with aforementioned foul mouthed cretins but will still venture to do on - line multi-player with friends who don't mind getting nothing for their efforts other than bonding time with good buds.
In fact, they are calling it «Credit Alert ™ for PayPal Users» because the only credit monitoring feature is the alerts (and a tiny subset of the typical alerts, at that).
With the exception of the tiny subset of the population neophilic enough to have an e-ink reader but not to have a smartphone or tablet, you can expect anybody still using e-ink to continue to do so pretty much forever.
But in practice that's a tiny subset of literary writers.
Customers today are expected to buy into a format that locks down their content into a silo, limits their purchasing choices based on where their credit card happens to have been registered, is designed to work best on devices that are rapidly becoming obsolete, and support only a tiny subset of the functionality available on any modern website.
They all sell alongside an already insanely powerful «63» version, but for some tiny subset of the population, 500 - plus horsepower just isn't enough.
But Brian Shoichet, co-senior author on the Nature paper and professor in the department of pharmaceutical chemistry at the University of California, San Francisco, says that they had another requirement, too, which was met by only a tiny subset of those molecules.
A study of Twitter use during the 2012 campaign suggested that only a tiny subset of followers were of any value.
For example, Google often conducts experiments on proposed new search algorithms by changing them for a tiny subset of searchers.
That is, ghostly blue light that illuminates the catacombs of the brain and causes a tiny subset of neurons with a known identity to produce electrical spikes wakes up the animal.
I've been collecting names of planners who primarily bill by the hour, and they are a tiny subset of the country's 310,000 personal financial advisors.

Not exact matches

A subset of affluent consumers is willing to pay higher prices for free - range beef, cage - free eggs, and other animal products marketed as sustainably produced and cruelty - free, but that's a tiny slice of the market.
You are basing the whole premise here on the idea that being an atheist models being a Christian and so looking at a tiny non-representative subset of atheists.
Using a novel combination of technologies, including trio exome sequencing of patient / parental DNA and genetic studies in the tiny larvae of zebrafish, the EuroEPINOMICS RES consortium found that mutations in the gene CHD2 are responsible for a subset of epilepsy patients with symptoms similar to Dravet syndrome — a severe form of childhood epilepsy that is in many patients resistant to currently available anti-epileptic drugs.
Among the 155 known exoplanets, the new world joins a tiny subset that may consist mainly of rock.
Of course, even if it were true that you were removing noise and not selecting opportunistically for error that was correlated with your instrument readings, and even if it were true that you were selecting a subset of trees with growth patterns that were, say, 95 % temperature signal and had been throughout their lives — none of which has the tiniest possibility of being the case — you would still have the problem that your modern series are being screened in a way that older series are not and can not bOf course, even if it were true that you were removing noise and not selecting opportunistically for error that was correlated with your instrument readings, and even if it were true that you were selecting a subset of trees with growth patterns that were, say, 95 % temperature signal and had been throughout their lives — none of which has the tiniest possibility of being the case — you would still have the problem that your modern series are being screened in a way that older series are not and can not bof trees with growth patterns that were, say, 95 % temperature signal and had been throughout their lives — none of which has the tiniest possibility of being the case — you would still have the problem that your modern series are being screened in a way that older series are not and can not bof which has the tiniest possibility of being the case — you would still have the problem that your modern series are being screened in a way that older series are not and can not bof being the case — you would still have the problem that your modern series are being screened in a way that older series are not and can not be.
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