Sentences with phrase «tradeoff which»

There is a performance / comfort tradeoff which can be decided depending on the usage.
It's a tradeoff which is perfect for both beginners and people looking for a small drone they can easily take anywhere.

Not exact matches

Which means that if a leadership «expert's» whole schtick is to basically tell you to be a good person, he or she isn't being honest about the difficult tradeoffs leaders face in the real world.
Create quandaries for yourself, in which there are tradeoffs between profits, customer experience, and ethically questionable practices.
I just finished a new book on this approach, Beyond the Business Plan, by Simon Bridge and Cecilia Hegarty, which outlines tradeoffs and recommends ten principles for every new venture explorer.
The once - stable Phillips Curve — which offered a tradeoff off higher inflation in exchange for lower unemployment — had disappeared.
It requires that policymakers make tradeoffs between lowering rates and deciding which tax provisions to eliminate.
Banking and finance are less risky now than they were in 2007, which is an unequivocal good, but there are tradeoffs.
This increased flexibility comes with the tradeoff of the rewards rate, which is anywhere between 1.25 % and 2.5 %.
We can even come up with hedge ratios that show the theoretical tradeoff between tranches as losses increase or decrease, which might work, might, if you are a small player in that market.
This was the thesis of Arthur Okun's 1974 Godkin Lectures at Harvard, which were published by the Brookings Institution under the title Equality and Efficiency — The Big Tradeoff.
In Inherit the Wind, Drummond gives a tough - sounding speech about the tradeoffs of progress, instructing the jury that every advance of civilization requires that something be surrendered: «Darwin moved us forward to a hilltop, where we could look back and see the way from which we came.
A lot of the perks you want will come with a tradeoff, so it is up to you to prioritize which features matter more to you.
True, it's not quite as easy as glass, which allows you to quickly see the amount of liquid from the outside even while baby is drinking, but it's a good solution and not a bad tradeoff.
This is especially true with respect to the extent to which children assess typical consumer tradeoffs regarding price and other food attributes.
FlatScope eliminates the tradeoff that hinders traditional microscopes in which arrays of lenses can either gather less light from a large field of view or gather more light from a smaller field.
Other researchers have found that the infected aphids infected with R - type die younger, however, which means there may be a tradeoff, Oliver says.
What in effect, we would be doing is displacing 300 oil - fired power plants and another 300 coal - fired power plants; so the land required for 600 fossil fuel power plants — if you are going to think that way, if you consider the whole system, which includes mining coal, which includes drilling for oil, the refining of all that, it's not just the power plant — that the land tradeoff actually gets to be fairly close, you know, the solar power plant is the footprint of the solar power and that's it.
So the immune system, which is normally considered to be working to protect us, is causing both help and harm, a tradeoff that could be affecting more animals than just snakes.
Mach's current research focuses on complicated adaptation strategies that require tradeoffs, such as managed retreat, a coastal management strategy in which people are moved away from encroaching shorelines.
But the economic tradeoffs in the natural marketplace are becoming unbalanced by nutrient pollution, most of which can be traced back to nitrogen fertilizers and fossil - fuel consumption.
That method could make a difference in cellulosic biofuel plants, which produce ethanol from waste products — corn husks and cobs — rather than edible kernels, a major advance in addressing the tradeoff of using agricultural land to grow corn for fuel rather than for food.
Support for this tradeoff between fertility and life span had come from experiments in which fruit flies that had been selected and bred for longevity produced few offspring early in life.
For instance, in addition to presiding over the long - running Leiden 85 - plus study, which tracks cognitive decline and risk factors for heart disease, stroke, and other illnesses in people 85 and older, Westendorp came up with an innovative and inexpensive way to explore the evolutionary tradeoff between longevity and fertility: analyzing old genealogical records of British aristocrats.
One tradeoff is that the sensor has a response time of approximately one temperature update per second, which is slightly slower than existing temperature sensors.
Previous attempts to develop programming languages that could understand other languages have faced tradeoffs between composability and expressiveness; they were either limited in their ability to unambiguously determine which embedded language was being used, or limited in which embedded languages could be used.
But no one knew if that result applied to a honeycomb, which Hales says is more like a dry foam in which the bubbles squeeze one another's shape, leading to tradeoffs in volume.
«But now comes the bad news: with that tolerance there is a tradeoff, which is that they become more susceptible to parasites that, in the case of ranavirus, can wipe out entire amphibian populations.»
«Plankton, which are key consumers of algae and a food source for many fish, may be making a monumental tradeoff to tolerate increased road salt,» said Rick Relyea, Jefferson Project director, CBIS member, and co-author of the study.
All the characters are, of course, but the tradeoff is that you get more realistic environments to explore, which was a great decision on the game's part.
The guide also examines the pros and cons of each approach, so voters come to acknowledge that any solution will require sacrifices or drawbacks and decide which tradeoffs they are willing to accept.
Research can show how the statistical approach affects the likelihood that programs are identified for some kind of action, which creates tradeoffs; some programs will be rightly identified while others will not.
And the tradeoff is taut body control, which in turn benefits the surprisingly responsive steering, adding - up to a car that, if driven smoothly and on wide enough roads, can be bundled along at quite a pace.
Would like more power, but it's good enough, and is the tradeoff for great fuel economy, which matters more to me.
Handling is sharper than you'd expect from such a large Caddy, possibly because of the use of aluminum - intensive construction (especially at the ends of the car, which helps keep weight centered between the axles) and a fairly stiff suspension design; unfortunately the tradeoff for the car's grip in the corners is a slightly harsh ride.
Bringing the price down to less than ten dollars a volume helped make manga a popular phenomenon, but the tradeoff was lower wages, which in turn resulted in lower quality work.
But I'm telling you that as a guy who was just in the 30's on a free day and have seen no net effect, the tradeoff doesn't seem very good given the benefit received, which in this case was none.
This new method assumes that you won't mind these artifacts up to about five lazy page - turns worth, and you'll appreciate seeing fewer blinks, which I'm not sure is necessarily a good tradeoff.
I don't do it on my author page, because I don't feel the need to and I also don't want to send people away from my site (and my books), which is what happens when people click on an ad, but the tradeoff is that I don't make much money from this site, despite putting time into it every week.
AFAIK, the tradeoff for this is that there is a cap on the other end, so the investment won't take advantage of a spike which is greater than 10 % or 12 %.
This increased flexibility comes with the tradeoff of the rewards rate, which is anywhere between 1.25 % and 2.5 %.
There are other ways to «class» stocks, most of which have a similar tradeoff between earnings percentage and voting percentage (typically by balancing these two you normalize the price of stocks; if one stock had better dividends and more voting weight than another, the other stock would be near - worthless), but companies may create and issue «superstock» to controlling interests to guarantee both profits and control.
In 1952, Harry Markowitz published published «Portfolio Selection» in The Journal of Finance, in which he formalized a way to analyze investment risk, and showed how assets could be combined in a portfolio to optimize the risk / return tradeoff.
This is the sense in which the term «risk - reward tradeoff» was coined.
It's because of the risk - return tradeoffwhich says that potential return rises with an increase in risk — that diversification through asset allocation is important.
For the U.S., which is at close to full employment and in no imminent danger of deflation, the tradeoff hardly seems worthwhile.
The tradeoff is that these points can be redeemed for more than a penny each, which is better than many frequent flier miles issued by airlines.
Where the tradeoff does hit, though, is on the miles earning rate, which is edged out slightly by competing cards.
Not an ideal situation, and perhaps the one snag in Sony's whole presentation, but the tradeoff seems worth it — especially given that you have to pay on Xbox as well, and won't even get nearly as many benefits like the «Instant Game Collection,» which kicks off on PlayStation 4 with a special version of Drive Club.
One of the key parameters of LCA is the social cost of carbon (SCC) which is needed to determine the tradeoffs between energy systems.
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