Intensiveness in a sentence as a noun

I think I answered my own question, but I'll ask anyway - why does memory intensiveness matter?

I suspect this underwrites a lot of their high standard of living vs. labor intensiveness.

Come on now, Truckee is half second homes - the resource intensiveness is based on gluttony not existence of housing.

Apart from their energy intensiveness, what is wrong with the suburbs?I grew up in suburbia, and I remember fresh air, open spaces and low crime.

If I could double the carbon intensiveness of milk production to completely eliminate its effects on the local environment, I would not.

Secondly, you have no idea if the resource intensiveness of this proprietary DRM video decoder will be any better than Silverlight's.

I don't think it makes any sense to project economic growth as being exponential while assuming that its energy-intensiveness will just keep increasing.

In terms of scale and intensiveness if state powers even small nations can easily outstrip the bureaucratic complexity of any ancient empire.

As you have already heard previously, I wasn't immediately aware of the mouseover intensiveness of the site- something that left me pondering - "surely, there has to be more"...

Here's a $20 voucher you can spend at any of our shops".As soon as any credit card transaction comes with a $5000 risk in damages & penalties if you've gotten your 5-year-old-never-updated-with-a-public-IP POS system cracked, the "labor-intensiveness" of paper money vanishes in comparison.

This is the new thing here, not labour intensiveness.> On the contrary, Brooks’s law on software project management states that “adding manpower to a late software project makes it later”.This has more to do with communication, collaboration and slowness of getting up to speed when joining a software project.

Intensiveness definitions

noun

high level or degree; the property of being intense

See also: intensity