Bifurcated in a sentence as an adjective

How can employers and employees adapt to this bifurcated market?

The argument you are making is purely academic, it will have no reflection of the new bifurcated web that will exist.

But 8's bifurcated touch/desktop strategy is good at neither and heading in a worse and worse direction with each successive release.

For as popular as chrome is, I feel like the browser market is going to become bifurcated between "normal users" and developers.

In short, you lumped all disabilities to validate your point about one specific part of it and bifurcated the IE market to make it seem smaller to prove your point.

Responsive Design's value proposition is that it is somewhat less complex and expensive than having a bifurcated experience on an m. subdomain.

I have had to force myself to temper my observation, given that most people do not want you pointing out unique anatomical facets whilst a person lays bifurcated.

It's strange that we live in such a bifurcated world, that on the one hand we have astronomical demands for a certain class of program, but for the kinds of programs we use day-to-day, they're shockingly procedural.

Thus the whole market has bifurcated between enormous $200 MM behemoths and $2 MM indie movies with limited theatrical distribution trying to promote themselves virally.

At the very least it's bifurcated into "Samsung-Android" and "Everyone-Else-Android".

Too many people discount the artistic side of things in the technical world, but it is quite obvious after working in the animation industry that there's nice parallels and inteconnetions between the two seemingly bifurcated fields.

If you want a bifurcated benefits distribution program, where BI and "conventional" taxes exist side-by-side, to see which program is more effective in an open competition, then telling supporters of BI "you not only have to pay the taxes you already pay, but you also then pay beyond that for BI" would handicap the results in favor of the existing "conventional" taxation system.

Bifurcated definitions

adjective

divided into or made up of two parts; "socially bifurcated populations"