Sentence examples for computerise from inspiring English sources

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computerise

verb

Standard spelling of from=non-Oxford British spelling

Exact(36)

One example is the decade-long attempt to computerise medical records nationally, which has produced a cost overrun of several billion pounds, a colossal loss by the main IT-company involved and no functioning system.

Gridlock on the superhighway The race to computerise biology Move over, silicon Trapeze artists The power of voice Bespoke chips for the common man A drug of one's own ReprintsThe simplest diode laser is a sandwich of so-called "n-type" and "p-type" semiconductors.

In France, Philippe Douste-Blazy, the health minister, has announced a plan to computerise health records, partly to control the excessive use of doctors by the country's notoriously demanding patients.In America, Medicare will insist on doctors using electronic methods for prescribing drugs to elderly Americans after the government starts bearing part of the cost.

Gridlock on the superhighway The race to computerise biology Move over, silicon Trapeze artists The power of voice Bespoke chips for the common man A drug of one's own ReprintsThe initial image produced by this form of "wavefront coding" is, of course, still blurry.

Gridlock on the superhighway The race to computerise biology Move over, silicon Trapeze artists The power of voice Bespoke chips for the common man A drug of one's own Reprints Related items OPINION: Innovation's golden gooseDec 12th 2002 MONITOR: Uncommon protectionDec 12th 2002Reversible data-hiding offers a clever solution.

A scheme to computerise the medical records of every patient in England has turned into a spectacularly expensive fiasco.

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Similar(24)

In Flash Boys, he turns his gaze on high-frequency computerised trading in US stock markets".

In a 2013 paper Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael Osborne, of Oxford University, analysed over 700 different occupations to see how easily they could be computerised, and concluded that 47% of employment in America is at high risk of being automated over the coming years.

But others are using fancy new techniques like cone-beam computerised tomography which actually expose people to much higher levels of radiation.Moreover, guidelines from the American Dental Association state that healthy adults should have a bitewing X-ray no more than once every two or three years, and that there is little reason to X-ray patients who do not have symptoms.

The clincher, though, came when they created computerised models of pachycephalosaur skulls and mapped the damage from each of their pitted specimens on to these virtual skulls.

The latest innovation is unmanned, miniature aircraft (adapted from army models) that can loiter over trouble spots, feeding images to police on the ground.Vast computerised collections of information have become popular too.

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