Sentence examples for linked in time from inspiring English sources

Exact(8)

His own home computer was still linked in time sharing mode to an updated version of his old NLS system, and he still used his keyset, in which no one else had shown interest.Bull-headed, many said.

It is tough to say which of these two news events, wildly divergent yet linked in time and place, is the most talked-about story of the week in the nail salons, conference rooms and supermarket aisles of Nassau and Suffolk counties.

Perhaps because the books are linked in time, and because you have to keep bouncing around in time, to understand the story, the blogs just made it more easy.

These changes might be linked in time to the genome rearrangement event that resulted in the translocation of a syntenic block encompassing the DAT gene from the chromosome 13 (rodents) to the telomere-proximal region of the chromosome 5 (human and primates).

Polarity of the Drosophila compound eye arises primarily as a consequence of two events that are tightly linked in time and space: fate specification of two photoreceptor cells, R3 and R4, and the subsequent directional movement of the unit eyes of the compound eye, or ommatidia.

Observation of the facts shows that these two phenomena, migration and insecurity, are linked in time and space and involve the same persons.

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Similar(52)

It takes the idea of the internet of things, where everyday objects are internet-enabled, allowing them to talk to one another, one step on, to focus on how data and people are linked in real time.

The TelEmergency program was developed to overcome these limitations by providing quality, affordable medical care to patients in rural emergency departments (EDs) using specially trained nurse practitioners linked in real time by telemedicine with their collaborating physicians at the University of Mississippi Medical Center Adult Emergency Department.

An ADR was defined as an AE thought to be linked in either time or dose to a drug given to that patient.

First, economies tend to be much more linked in bad times than correlations in good times suggest.

This suggests that economies are far more linked in bad times than their ties in good times suggest.Other research revealed another new culprit: "pure" contagion.

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