This particular stretch of road is one of the main bottlenecks for traffic leaving the town during rush hour times. |
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The eventual winners in the wireless space would be companies that managed to identify similar infrastructural bottlenecks. |
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In this study, we did not consider the effect of demography, such as population size bottlenecks and expansions. |
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That makes drug therapy hard, because we need those important bottlenecks and pivot points to aim our molecules at. |
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The state government had decided to hand over the laboratory to the Centre in 1995, but administrative bottlenecks caused the seven-year delay. |
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It looks like it's going to be the mother of all bottlenecks, and a super overpass will be needed. |
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The Prime Minister today released the report from the taskforce he commissioned to examine the bottlenecks in the system. |
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From 1914, he applied them to the war effort, helping to clear production bottlenecks in munition factories. |
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He uses shadowy ghostings of pedal steel or slide blues tonality, though there are no bottlenecks in sight. |
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For those who do decide to drive, motorists have been warned of possible bottlenecks on motorway approaches and on main roads into city centres. |
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One of the areas that we feel needs to be addressed on priority are bottlenecks in several entry points to the city. |
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Eyewitnesses spoke of people having to fight their way to get near the image, while roads round the temple became bottlenecks of traffic. |
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This would be especially good considering the almost daily South Granville Street traffic bottlenecks and gridlock. |
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The package announced today will address some serious bottlenecks on the motorway and trunk road network, which currently cause major delays. |
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According to Airslide President and CEO Marc Zionts, the first problem is to handle today's signaling bottlenecks. |
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This approach can also help identify where non-value-added steps exist in the care delivery process and where bottlenecks occur. |
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This investment will reduce bottlenecks at two of our major border crossings. |
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One of the biggest bottlenecks is the memory subsystem responsible for data storage and retrieval. |
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He said he was more worried about oil supply bottlenecks, low inventories and, in particular, very low spare output capacity. |
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This paradox can be explained by the occurrence of narrow bottlenecks during oogenesis or early embryo development. |
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Tuning is the process of successfully shifting bottlenecks to places that have a wide enough bandpass to handle your data throughput needs. |
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This allows the practice to run more fluently by reducing bottlenecks at reception during busy times. |
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Information needs to be synthesized to be able to determine whether progress is truly being made and where bottlenecks are impeding progress. |
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Storage bottlenecks occur when the business encounters a combination of repetitive file accesses, and large program and data files that strain storage resources. |
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Furthermore, disequilibrium is a good indicator of recent mutations, genetic drift, bottlenecks, stratification or admixture, and the demographic history of populations. |
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This will reduce the potential for bottlenecks and allow a smooth flow of traffic from the main access road to the parkade. |
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These bottlenecks can delay appropriate assignments of patients to beds. |
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It would be useful to establish an inventory of administrative bottlenecks causing the overlong delays in inland navigation. |
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As a neutral platform, Kunstenloket identifies bottlenecks, lacunas and interpretational problems. |
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We must eliminate the bottlenecks which prevent too many Europeans from finding work. |
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Adequate investment in new infrastructure to remove bottlenecks and missing links, plus fullest use of existing infrastructure, are essential. |
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It was further noted that the UNECE already has prepared an inventory of bottlenecks and missing links on the E waterway network. |
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In Illinois, levels of diversity drop precipitously, most likely reflecting one or more genetic bottlenecks in areas that were once covered by the Wisconsin glaciation. |
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So bottlenecks in infrastructure are partly being unclogged by luring in private capital. |
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Location information will provide dispatch offices with information of where assets are, as well as a means by which drivers can be rerouted around traffic bottlenecks. |
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Preflight options for print, PDF and SVG output help you resolve potential problems and reduce cost by eliminating bottlenecks. |
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I should nevertheless like to mention two bottlenecks, namely the fact that we are operating from three locations and the voluntary pension fund. |
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Data transfers are autonomically balanced across all links, thus avoiding bottlenecks. |
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This approach to virtualization concentrates on easing data movement like replication and migration operations, and is also good at identifying system bottlenecks. |
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And executives need to deal with those people-oriented changes up front or risk delays and bottlenecks in getting e-market initiatives off the ground. |
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Many are repeat offenders creating potentially hazardous bottlenecks. |
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A free and open forum rather than a climate of dissonance must be fostered to prevent bottlenecks in the critical flow of information. |
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However, this engine will only run smoothly if not perturbed by macroeconomic disturbances or hampered by structural bottlenecks. |
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Where bottlenecks persist, ex ante regulation will therefore continue to be necessary in the future and will have to be even more effective. |
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Draft rules introduced in 1999 sought to address bottlenecks by sharpening the focus of hearings and minimizing the need for adjournments. |
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We frame our analysis in terms that include both populations of constant size and populations that sustain periods of growth followed by population bottlenecks. |
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A poor performance on their part creates bottlenecks that have rippling effects across the system and negatively affect requesters' rights. |
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It was necessary to act very quickly to avoid bottlenecks when the time came for replacement. |
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Enables formulators to quickly assess the potential issues with new formulas and avoid potential bottlenecks waiting on regulatory assessments. |
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They have learnt about bottlenecks in the delivery of health services, about practices and procedures that work and those that do not. |
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We are aware of these bottlenecks, and we are dealing with them one by one. |
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Sending a separate stream to each member of the audience causes bottlenecks on the Internet. |
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The review should diagnose and identify key bottlenecks and points of structural failure behind the current crisis. |
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However, in spite of general improvements, countries still need to make efforts to overcome a series of serious bottlenecks. |
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Of all the infrastructural bottlenecks impeding India's growth, a shortage of electricity may be the most crippling. |
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This compounds the problem of bottlenecks resulting from the increasing number of mandatory consultations. |
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For that reason, priority should be given to removing bottlenecks and making better use of the road network, especially in urban areas. |
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I think some of the real problems were the bureaucracy, bottlenecks, control, and centralization. |
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However, full and efficient use of inland waterways is still hampered by a number of bottlenecks and shortcomings. |
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Other delays may arise from internal mailroom bottlenecks and large batches of prints submitted at the same time. |
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The capacity provided by the various networks will thus be used more rationally and efficiently, reducing bottlenecks and hence time losses. |
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In another European species, the noctule bat, no genetic evidence was found that could be interpreted as directional colonization and glacial-induced bottlenecks. |
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Furthermore, the specific bottlenecks cannot be easily removed because this could be achieved only by duplicating the entire production process. |
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The review should also address the bottlenecks in the planning system that are causing unnecessary delays and costs to the construction sector, the CIF said. |
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The Technical Committee meets once a week with the IEC to review the process, identify bottlenecks and map out the strategies to overcome them. |
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The new court will merge the criminal and central criminal courts and should clear the bottlenecks that have delayed many hearings, according to the parties. |
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Various apparent barriers to competition, such as the bottlenecks created by the power grid operators, must be straightened out without delay. |
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It also reduces bottlenecks and helps speed memory performance. |
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By examining other bottlenecks all Eurasian men are descended from a man who lived 69,000 years ago. |
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While there were stories about land tenure concerns, transportation bottlenecks, and political problems, Brazil was touted as the land of opportunity. |
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The group plans to mechanize the production process to remove bottlenecks and encourage greater contributions from members for new equipment or machine repairs. |
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The insufficiency of transport infrastructures, high costs and bottlenecks in intra-regional trade weigh down the economies of the countries of Central America. |
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They opine that where there are bottlenecks of capacity at some German airports, whereas widely spread new small airports are developed, which are extensively public financed but contend for passengers. |
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Present traffic loads have overtaxed the existing infrastructure, necessitating reduced speeds and causing bottlenecks, a situation that is expected to worsen in light of the projected railway traffic increases. |
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Waiting lists for health care have generally decreased since 2001, but bottlenecks continue to exist for those most dependant on health care namely disabled and older people. |
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Regions with skill shortages and bottlenecks and low unemployment often exist side by side with regions with skill surpluses and high unemployment. |
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If there is a choice between different routes, that involving any potential dangers such as narrow roads, dangerous junctions, heavy traffic, bottlenecks, roads in poor condition and roadworks should be avoided. |
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I would say that we need regulation to push for competition because otherwise bottlenecks can actually prevent competition which can help citizens because it will be the incentive for lower prices and higher quality services. |
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Because it is quite obvious that lorries are continuing to build up in bottlenecks, leading to all sorts of unpleasantness showing us human exploitation in all its glory. |
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There are two other bottlenecks that we often talk about: the export of raw materials, and the failure to transform subsistence and traditional farming into modernized agriculture. |
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Anger is growing as hundreds of thousands of people made homeless by the quake were yet to receive aid because of logistic bottlenecks, poor infrastructure and a chaotic government response. |
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Rising demand for refined oil products squeezed spare refining capacity and bottlenecks also increased because of the lack of sufficient capacity to process heavy and sour grades of crude oil. |
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Urgent action is necessary to remove a number of bottlenecks that are currently still hampering the rapid development of the digital single market. |
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The frontloading and sub-frontloading operations allowed the delivery of the euro banknotes and coins to be spread over a longer period of time, thus avoiding supply bottlenecks. |
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For reasons of safety and to maintain standards, adequately trained specialist staff must also be on hand in order to be able to bridge bottlenecks. |
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Failure to adequately plan for and inform drivers of these diversionary routes can simply displace congestion and bottlenecks from major routes able to cope with traffic volumes to smaller ones that become easily congested. |
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There have been reports of misdiagnosis, low motivation due to a narrow career progression, or of referral bottlenecks where clinical officers, unable to diagnose adequately, simply represent an additional level of referral. |
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The institutions have to base their estimates on well-defined needs, avoiding duplication of functions, focusing on core operations and eliminating malpractice and all bottlenecks. |
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This means, inter alia, that we have demanded assurances in terms of efficient administration, decentralisation, swift payments, avoidance of bottlenecks and scrutiny of funds. |
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We know that if we are forced to walk out, CPRail will eventually be ground to a standstill as the traffic slows but the trains keep coming, hitting bottlenecks, congestion and being yarded all over the place. |
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A deep study of the performance, bottlenecks and design challenges is carried out showing the validity of this approach and achieving very high frame per second rates. |
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The simulator runs process scenarios, so users can visually spot and analyze bottlenecks prior to incurring the expense of deploying or automating business processes. |
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As ministries of health develop their medium-term expenditure plans, system bottlenecks need to be clearly identified and strategies for unblocking them costed. |
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A wide variety of diseases are influenced by ion channels but only a few have been commercially exploited as targets because of a lack of structural information and bottlenecks in high throughput assay technologies. |
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This helps administrators easily expand networks and eliminate bottlenecks between cascaded switches or uplinks to servers meaning pain-free network and bandwidth expansion. |
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The supply response was relatively quick for metals such as zinc, which are mainly extracted from medium-size mines where output can often be ramped up quickly and where infrastructure bottlenecks are less of a constraint. |
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This makes the economy more vulnerable to a hard landing. India cannot grow as fast as China without igniting inflation because of its lower investment rate, particularly in infrastructure, and labour bottlenecks. |
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The operational and construction advantages compared with standard solutions, i.e. no need for offshore heavy lifting cranes, are an important differentiating factor as installation bottlenecks are avoided. |
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There were other bottlenecks besides customs. |
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It defines priorities with a view to this shift: moving towards fair charging arrangements and acting to combat bottlenecks and environmental degradation, as well as giving a pivotal role to users. |
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Increased investment in ports and into the hinterland is necessary in order to improve and extend services so that ports become poles for growth instead of potential transhipment bottlenecks. |
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The second consequence from the decision to have a single supplier, and my colleague from Repentigny has referred to this, is that supplies are affected by bottlenecks and by changes in demand. |
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Those effects offer an intriguing mechanism for bottlenecks in Beringian moose populations. |
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It has been clear during the Group discussions that, in the absence of such measures, bottlenecks would occur especially at border crossings even if infrastructure works were completed. |
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For instance, it may allow increased labour inflows to the euro area, which, in certain sectors, would help to reduce bottlenecks in labour markets and hence ease wage pressures. |
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Neutral events can radically reduce genetic variation through population bottlenecks. |
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The genetic diversity in the human lineage is relatively low, which indicate one or several population bottlenecks late in our lineage. |
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The main purpose of this was to reduce bottlenecks at peak times as well as general crowding. |
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This project aims to develop new processes and solve bottlenecks in the fermentative production of biosurfactants and specialty carbohydrates. |
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Further, the report states that baby toiletry providers will have to circumvent some growth bottlenecks to ensure sustained growth in the coming years. |
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Meru's virtualization technology is a proven strategy for addressing these density issues and avoiding the bottlenecks and meltdowns that are otherwise difficult to avoid. |
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This makes external shipping an especially viable option to alleviate bottlenecks generated because DoD has a finite amount of airlift available for all missions. |
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Human genetic diversity decreases in native populations with migratory distance from Africa and this is thought to be the result of bottlenecks during human migration. |
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The faster tempo of the operations was intended to add to German difficulties in replacing tired divisions through the railway bottlenecks behind the German front. |
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Mr. King's message was that Johnny Foreigner does it better than us. In Germany, in Japan and in the United States, these bottlenecks just do not happen. |
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One reason is a lack of data granularity, which makes it impossible to clearly and accurately identify the cause of bottlenecks when behavior issues are detected. |
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This solution fully off-loads all compute-intensive cryptographic functions from a server thus eliminating bottlenecks and maximizing potential e-business capacity. |
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As a member of the alliance, Agilent will collaborate with other members on proof-of-concept applications that address critical bottlenecks in biomedical discovery. |
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The relatively high speed and large movements of people traveling by train would have caused bottlenecks if regular passport controls had been used. |
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The harbor modernization program, for example, is aimed at preventing bottlenecks for goods coming into the state, said state Transportation Director Brennon Morioka. |
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Instrumentation can also reveal what operations within an application are responsible for bottlenecks, and can be used for capacity planning and chargeback schemes. |
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The stretch is notorious for bottlenecks and crashes, past incidents including overturned caravans and a lorry which spilt its load of firelighters. |
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Marvell's Alaska X device eases these bandwidth bottlenecks in next-generation systems by providing an aggregate bandwidth of 10 Gigabits per second. |
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