Results 11 - 20
of
2,249
Table 3: Number of main lines in split or merged communities
2003
"... In PAGE 7: ...2). Table3 shows the number of main lines and branch lines in each intervals. About half of survived (not dissolved) communities in 1999 and 2000 are included in main lines for one year, and about 66% of survived commu- nities in 2001 are included in main lines for four months.... ..."
Cited by 11
Table 1 summariz-
"... In PAGE 8: ... formed by the intelligence commu- nity in the data fusion area of the SIAC. Pr OOB charts and target folders) are maintained in the planning area of the SIAC for use by strike planners Table1 . Data organization in the strike planning process.... ..."
Table 2. Paired community comparison metrics available through the BUGPROGRAM.
"... In PAGE 24: ...In addition to descriptive characteristics, six paired commu- nity comparison metrics are available through the DNR- BUG program. These include both similarity and dissimi- larity indices ( Table2 ). Despite the high degree of variability6 associated with similarity indices (Szczytko 1988) their application to bioassessments is not entirely without merit.... ..."
Table 1: Propagation w/ hyponym!hypernym links
1998
"... In PAGE 6: ...ence of (.70, .10, .10, .10) for the senses of \com- munity quot; (with no evidence for town). Table1 shows the posterior probabilities before and after applying this evidence. As can be seen, the high evidence for commu- nity#1 increases the support for the hypernym gathering#1 (as well as for the other ancestors in the same path not shown).... ..."
Cited by 10
Table 6. Operation mapping between SNMP and HTTP
2003
"... In PAGE 13: ... The trap operation is the action where the SNMP agent automatically reports the event information to the manager. Table6 shows mapping methods of these SNMP operations between SNMP and HTTP. When the manager requests information from the agent by HTTP, the HTTP message is com- posed of 5 parameters of host, operation, commu- nity, xpath, value.... ..."
Cited by 4
Table 3: Networked Distributed Collaboration vs Isolated Distributed Collaboration
"... In PAGE 5: ... The need of NDC, a proposal of founda- tions for realization of NDC, and the role of agents in NDC are presented in the following paragraphs. Table3 presents the comparison between networked distributed collaboration and isolated or unnetworked distributed collaboration. Need for Networking Distributed Collaboration The networking of the open commu- nity establishes a virtual centralized platform which helps in active and guided collabora- tion.... ..."
Table 1. Design features that help to maximise the added value brought to a community by a radioactive waste management facility
"... In PAGE 17: ... Probably many more illustrations can be found. Table1 below summarises the design features that may help the facility and site to add durable value to the community. These features tend to maximise the potential of a facility to be adopted by the members of the host commu- nity, by fitting in, adapting to and, moreover, contributing directly to their pre- ferred way of life.... ..."
Table 35 also shows that respondents from other Alaska communities feel that the most accept- able condition for cutting timber is for the removal of dead or insect-infested trees (79 percent), fol- lowed by creating or improving wildlife habitat (67 percent), prevention of fire and the subse- quent protection of life and personal property (59 percent), and commercial profit (26 percent.) Ten percent feel there is no acceptable reason for cutting timber.
"... In PAGE 82: ...5 million board feet of timber on average. Table35 shows that across all respondents from the 12 CNF commu- nities, the most acceptable condition for cutting timber is for the removal of dead or insect- infested trees (80 percent), followed by the pre- vention of fire and the subsequent protection of life and personal property (74 percent), and cre- ating or improving wildlife habitat (68 percent). Cutting timber for commercial profit was the least acceptable condition (23 percent).... ..."
Table 3: Descriptive statistics of model outputs
2006
"... In PAGE 4: ... I found that when there are about 5, 6 or 7 open source commu- nities, the firms are doing very well in terms of the number of employees and consequently in terms of the average agent wealth. The means and standard deviations for the overall model and when there are 5 - 7 open source communities is presented in Table3 . In spite of the agents constantly switching between being employed by the firm and joining the open source community the average number of firm employees (firm number) for this configuration was as high as 26 (i.... ..."
Table 1. System characteristics
2006
"... In PAGE 7: ... We have tested t-kernel on MICA2 fam- ily motes, including MICA2, XSMv1, and ExScal motes, as shown in Figure 6(a). Table1 lists specifications of the hard- ware and system parameters for the t-kernel on MICA2. We intend to release the t-kernel to the WSN research commu- nity, and are currently improving it for TinyOS compatibility.... In PAGE 7: ... Empirical study leads us to choose bits 2-7 of the VPC to index VPC lookaside buffer, and bit13-bit6 to index the 2-associative VPC table. As listed in Table1 , the kernel code occupies 28KB of the 128KB program memory. The t-kernel reserves 1KB RAM for stack space.... ..."
Cited by 14
Results 11 - 20
of
2,249