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Table 2 Employment status: Of the survey 52% were in paid employment. The survey found 39% of those in paid employment had used the Internet as opposed to 28% of those not in paid employment. Not surprisingly, 88% of the employed group had used the Internet at work against only 8% of the latter group. This suggests the importance of the workplace in initial Internet access. Ethnicity: The main variation in Internet access amongst ethnic groups was the Pacific Island population being much lower than all other groups.
Table 4 shows that there are no sharp differences in the average behavior of foreign banks and domestic banks.31 Marginally, in Mexico and Peru, foreign banks tend to be more retail- oriented than domestic banks as the ratio in the former group of banks is lower than the ratio in the latter group. This result may help to ease concerns among policymakers fearing a potentially adverse effect of an increased participation of foreign banks on the availability of funding to small businesses and consumers.
"... In PAGE 32: ...31 foreign banks behave differently than domestic banks with respect to the ratio of demand to total deposits. Table4 presents the average ratio of demand deposits to total deposits for domestic and foreign banks in three Latin American countries with a large participation of foreign banks: Mexico, Peru, and Chile. Table 4 ... ..."
Table 1: Benchmarks. We use two benchmark sets: Training (left) to parameterize our model and Reference (right) to eval- uate the accuracy of our model. We use the benchmarks above the line to model/evaluate computation; those below for com- munication. We refer to the former as the NONET group and the latter as the NET group. The benchmarks in boldface we use to model/evaluate persistent storage; we refer to this group as FLASH. We execute all programs except the FLASH group (which we execute from the compact flash card) from RAM.
"... In PAGE 2: ... The ref- erence set however, contains additional non-overlapping programs. We present the suites and their input sizes in Table1 . The left half of the table is the training set and the right is the reference set.... ..."
Table 2: Document ordering with binary and Gray codes. Hamming distances represent the distance from a document (with the distance indicated) to the adjacent document immediately above it, understood as the document immediately to its left on a shelf. The average Hamming distance between adjacent documents using the binary code is , while the average distance between adjacent documents is only for Gray code ordered documents, indicating that the latter is superior at grouping documents by subject.
1992
"... In PAGE 11: ... Classification using the proposed method requires that the presence or absence of all features be represented directly or indirectly by binary values at a certain position in the Gray code. A sample set of documents shown in Table2 illustrates how documents may be arranged using the arithmetic (regular) counting sequence and the Gray code count- ing sequence. The arithmetic or alphabetic counting sequences are used in most library classification systems such as the Dewey Decimal and Library of Congress Classification systems.... ..."
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Table 2: Nonsquarefree orders with small multiplier groups
1994
"... In PAGE 6: ... The orders eliminated in this way are given in Table 1 and 2. Table 1 gives the squarefree orders, and Table2 the nonsquarefree ones. For the latter group, each possible exponent v0 with v jv0jv was tested separately.... ..."
TABLE X. Two-dimensional decagonal lattice color groups isomorphic listed by giving the coefficients of the vectors b1 ...b5 in terms equivalent to listing the values of the generating phase function group compatibility conditions (21). The right-hand column specifies lattice color groups is 10mm or just 10. In the latter case the distinct which one modular lattice is the mirror image of the other.
1997
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Table 2. There are two types of composition: temporal and atemporal. The latter is a collection of multimedia presentations, for example the three presentations shown in Fig. 1. The former is a grouping of media items belonging to the same presentation, for example the complete subscene about the on/off switch. We describe the temporal composite component.
Table 2. There are two types of composition: temporal and atemporal. The latter is a collection of multimedia presentations, for example the three presentations shown in Fig. 1. The former is a grouping of media items belonging to the same presentation, for example the complete subscene about the on/off switch. We describe the temporal composite component.
Table 2. There are two types of composition: temporal and atemporal. The latter is a collection of multimedia presentations, for example the three presentations shown in Fig. 1. The former is a grouping of media items belonging to the same presentation, for example the complete subscene about the on/off switch. We describe the temporal composite component.
Table 3. Benchmark groups
1998
"... In PAGE 4: ... Since the impact of branch prediction will be very low for the latter four bench- marks, we exclude them from all averages. Table3 shows the groups for which we will commonly show average misprediction rates. We have included the SPECint95 programs mostly for comparison purposes; we do not believe that they are the best choice for evaluating indirect branch predictors (except for gcc).... ..."
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