Exact(31)
"We thought if there was something we could uniquely own, we'd have a strong, competitive advantage".
It had a leader in Barack Obama who could uniquely inspire a national transformation.
While not all treatments could uniquely identify a diagnosis, many treatments do indicate a diagnosis.
They used them exactly as they do today – so they could uniquely identify devices.
Each 31 × 31 × 468 array could uniquely watermark every frame in 16 s of 30 fps video.
The problem of reserve network design became the first theoretical problem that conservation biology could uniquely claim at its own.
Similar(28)
About 20% of reads could be uniquely mapped to the genome for CLIP samples, while ~60% of reads could be uniquely aligned to the genome for RNAseq samples.
Ingels declared, "In my own humble opinion, we were the ones who managed to discover, or uncover, something that could be uniquely Park City.
At the same time, Israel has a powerful American lobby with bipartisan strength that could be uniquely positioned to help the White House shore up support in Congress.
Robertson seems a well-adjusted person ("She's brilliant. Very fair," says one colleague) but she sounds hard-headed when she discusses why Dorchester could be uniquely well-placed for a Woolworths-style renaissance.
Professor Latanya Sweeney of Harvard University proved the term meaningless more than a decade ago when she demonstrated that 87% of all Americans could be uniquely identified using only three bits of information: their postcodes, birth dates and gender.
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