A world of
too much data, too many choices, too many possibilities and too little time is forcing us to decide what we value.
There is no such thing as
too much data.
Many salespeople unknowingly confuse their customers by giving
them too much data.
An app simply can use
too much data and takes too much time to download.
You provide
too much data.
Any more and you chew up
too much data bandwidth.
The company has not yet stated whether it plans to appeal the ruling, although last year, Facebook won an appeal against Belgian authorities who had concerns that Facebook was collecting
too much data about its users.
The most recent issue concerned user privacy, as OnePlus has been found to collect
too much data from its phones, the kind of user - identifiable information no smartphone maker should get.
It could be due to a unique quirk with Chromecast - enabled devices, which send
too much data at once, which causes the router to crash.
If an app is using
too much data but at slower intervals, some of its data is pushed to pagefile if electronic memory is short of free space.
In a widely shared story, Josh Constine at news site Tech Crunch detailed the many different ways over the last 10 years that the site had gathered
too much data and shared it too widely.
The Samsung Max app is able to identify which apps are consuming
too much data and provide users with a one - tap solution for privacy protection.
Is your ISP slowing down your connection because you've used
too much data?
To start, go back to your home screen and open one of the apps that's using
too much data.
And you will realise that you are giving away way
too much data to apps on Facebook and Android than needed.
Facebook Cambridge Analytica data scandal: We are giving away way
too much data to apps on Facebook and Android than needed.
Instead of smothering you with
too much data, the workout screen on the band will now be split into three horizontal sections.
If your Android device is suddenly slow, using
too much data, or showing corrupted data, then you could have downloaded an infected app that came along with malware — or the much more obvious ransomware.
Per the Wall Street Journal, Facebook is under the impression that this will somehow help dispel the (entirely accurate) notion that the site has aggregated
too much data about its users:
It's not even as simple as looking at the maximum attachment size of the service you use and the service you're emailing — emails often travel over several mail transfer agents when they're sent, so you may have your attachment rejected by a server along the way if you attach
too much data.
In general this is a whole bunch of alarmist hoopla, yes, providers see
too much data, no it's nothing compared to Facebook and Google.
Every sound, sight, and sensation comes in full blast —
too much data leading to the inability to process, and the system halts.
Even if you limit the number of people you follow, which has its own flaws, there is just
too much data good to retain.
Elevate experts present a case study titled «Seeing the Forest for the Trees: Overcoming the Challenges of
Too Much Data»
Preserving
too much data leads to problems as well, potentially as harmful to a company as an e-discovery sanction.
So that's one thing, and so what we try to do is we try to help them identify the most efficient ways to collect the data from their clients and not collect
too much data.
For example, volume based pricing makes it difficult to budget and can certainly dissuade one from the using the tool if there is
too much data.
Joshua Lenon: Law firms actually may have
too much data.
There are just
too much data out there showing the problems.
«One of the ways people deal with
too much data / information is to make a simplifying story.
The result is that there is
too MUCH data to readily identify what you require.
A more valid criticism is that I'm actually taking out
too much data, as the eruptions are only partially responsible for cooling in that period — for instance there was a La Niña episode in 1984
[The following numbers are representative only, and not definitive —
too much data to sift through accurately, so some broad assumptions are being made here to merely present an different approach to the problem — «that nothing can be done»]
There is far
too much data - vizualization on this to link to, but feel free to do so in the comments.
You wouldn't want to leave out
too much data.
It'd be great to have higher coverage (you can never have
too much data!).
In fact, the biggest cause of failure to find a book is entering
too much data.
Rep. Markey is concerned that the Kindle Fire's Web browser, Silk, which is built into the tablet, will collect
too much data about the products users buy and how much they pay.
In many elementary schools I find teachers spend too much time collecting and / or examining
too much data.
The dashboards present
too much data, or data that is too obvious.
When there is
too much data flowing simultaneously, or we aren't given enough time to process information, it simply overflows and never makes it to the long - term memory banks.
If
too much data irritates you, this brevity will please you.
Now that biology has entered the age of big data, technologies such as genome sequencers are generating «
too much data for us to look at by eye,» says Atwal.
Given the brain's immense intricacy, Farber says, the problem «is not that we have
too much data, but that we don't have nearly enough for the complexity we're trying to address».
The MARS version of the Eye presents an unfamiliar problem for Widder:
too much data.
An off - the - wall new study by Brown University researchers shows that terahertz frequency data links can bounce around a room without dropping
too much data.
New research shows that non-line-of-site terahertz data links are possible because the waves can bounce off of walls without losing
too much data.
Some physicists worry that by fixating on it and other «known unknowns», such as supersymmetry, the LHC might be missing other, more interesting, particles (see «Is the LHC throwing away
too much data?»).
«Where you have a really dynamic scene, like an explosion, you end up with fast - moving sections not being captured accurately due to frame - rate and processing power restrictions and
too much data being used to represent areas that remain static.
Kepler has collected
too much data for anyone to go through it all by hand, so humans or computer programs typically only verify the most promising signals of the bunch.