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be datum
noun
(plural: data) A measurement of something on a scale understood by both the recorder (a person or device) and the reader (another person or device). The scale is arbitrarily defined, such as from 1 to 10 by ones, 1 to 100 by 0.1, or simply true or false, on or off, yes, no, or maybe, etc.
synonyms
Exact(1)
Self-calibrating bundle adjustment techniques are able to estimate accurately the geometry of an object or trajectory but are said to be datum deficient in respect of scale, in that the units of the estimated target coordinates are arbitrary.
Similar(59)
An example is Datum, a decentralized marketplace for user data.
The cloud on which a datum or service is deployed is indicated as a superscript; e.g. d j a is datum j deployed on cloud a. Figure 4 All valid workflows produced by mapping blocks to clouds.
Malebranche takes this to be a datum of our experience, but the underlying principle is of Platonic origin.
Mean sea level is the datum to which elevations and contour intervals are generally referred.
Teacher: For me as a geologist it is a datum that the age of earth is some billions years old.
In sum the declining labor force participation rate is a datum that should worry us more than the unemployment rate.
The baseline (or reference) is any datum against which change is measured.
Calculations relative to each datum were made because tidal datum records exhibited an increase in tidal range in this region from the 1920s to the 1990s.
If none such appears, that will be a valuable datum.
Likewise, that you experience precisely God and not something else cannot be a phenomenological datum.
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