Idiom
Fine tuning.
Small adjustments to improve something or to get it working are called fine tuning.
Exact(5)
It's online, so Google can and will constantly fine-tune it, add features and beef up the help mechanisms.
Mr. Fox said Google's ability to constantly fine-tune its operations was intricately linked with its obsession with measuring just about everything that happened on its system.
The rapid pace of change in computing also means that I.B.M. must not only shift its technology portfolio but also constantly fine-tune its work force.
At Northern Light, librarians constantly fine-tune their directory structure and come up with names of categories used for sorting Web sites.
His group's mission, to constantly fine-tune Google's ad delivery system, has one overriding objective: show users only the ads they are most likely to be interested in and click on.
Similar(55)
It is constantly fine-tuning the product.
As Google constantly fine-tunes its search engine, one challenge it faces is sheer scale.
Bottom-Line Bulletins We are constantly fine-tuning our operations in our relentless effort to make your sickness pay.
To market to a diverse mix of immigrants, card producers are constantly fine-tuning their products to different calling habits and the most popular destinations.
From the first Polaroid Land Camera of 1947 to the SX-70, introduced in 1972, his most refined product, Mr. Land was constantly fine-tuning his instant camera, "obsessed with keeping the quality high".
In the past few years, Alvarez has doggedly pursued this approach to art-making, constantly fine-tuning his inventions but also embracing chance and accident when he likes the results.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com