Dictionary
be beacon
noun
A signal fire to notify of the approach of an enemy, or to give any notice, commonly of warning.
Exact(7)
It used to be Beacon, a branch of the Manhattan restaurant, and is owned by David Emil and his partners.
IF you were an investor wagering on any Hudson Valley city, it might be Beacon, with a world-class attraction in Dia:Beacon, its walkable downtown, and an emerging art scene a 90-minute train ride from Grand Central Terminal.
(ii) The IEEE 802.15.4 WPAN must be beacon enabled with an active and an inactive period.
Location verification schemes for detecting false position reports may be beacon based or sensor based.
The IEEE 802.15.4 WPAN must be beacon enabled with an active and an inactive period.
The RPE [2] is a positioning system that requires at least 5%% of the nodes to be beacon nodes, randomly distributed in the sensor field.
Similar(53)
We want our political leaders to be beacons of morality; better men than we.
"Universities should be beacons of good practice and catalysts for change.
These genes can be considered to be "beacons" that point to pathways or gene networks that are altered.
In fact, it was Beacon Radio in the West Midlands.
"That's Beacon, a 6-year-old calf out of Echo".
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