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Hillis imagined that human thought arises from the operations of millions of neurons interacting and working on problems in diverse ways in computer parlance, massively parallel processing.
The word hack is filched, as Shoshana Berger, editor in chief of ReadyMade magazine put it, from computer parlance, as in, "hacking into the mainframe".
In computer parlance, it is a "first-person shooter," which entails romping around an elaborately wrought, three-dimensional world in pursuit of hostile guys who, as Catch-22's Yossarian would say, are trying to kill you!
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Current models of human behavior are known to be brittle, in computer simulation parlance, which means they are unreliable.
This paper presents a systematic study of efficient heuristics in the successful attacks of some block ciphers which though simple are representative ones in computer security parlance.
Those policies include coverage of malicious Internet outages that are intentionally caused by hackers and vandals and which are known in insurance and computer industry parlance as "denial of services".
HoloLens, Microsoft's $3,000 mixed-reality goggles (or "the world's first self-contained holographic computer" in Microsoft's parlance), was only available in the U.S. and Canada so far.
To that end, Oracle might just want Sun to ship its monster databases ready inside powerful computers; in the industry parlance, they get to own more of the "stack" of products, from boards and processors through to operating systems and applications.
Underscoring Mr. Anderson's optimism is a feature list for Windows 2000 that begins with its ability to handle larger tasks -- in industry parlance, "to scale" -- running on computers based on as many as 32 processors.
In today's parlance, a PHR typically refers to a computer-based record – either a standalone product (e.g., accessible on the Internet or on a USB drive) or one that is integrated with the provider's electronic health record (EHR).
"Then he realizes, 'I don't need it.' " That is because Chrome stores everything that people have on their computers — like documents, photos and e-mail — online, or in tech parlance, in the cloud.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com