Provenance in a sentence as a noun

An easy to use web site to check provenance of parts by serial number.

Second, the best ECC systems have parameters of well-known provenance.

Yet Nelson uses a shakespeare play as one of his examples blithely ignoring the problem of provenance throughout.

The real problem with Xanadu is that it's based on a fundamentally flawed concept -- knowable provenance.

HN participants were quick to identify the key issues of provenance while simultaneously picking apart the claims.

Not that prosecutors incorrectly and dishonestly claimed that he faced such a sentence --- or even that the provenance of that number was the prosecutors at all.

Any shrinkwrapped DVD that has passed through an Amazon fulfillment warehouse is actually of entirely unknown provenance; it could have been purchased at a stall in Shanghai for all you know.

We see a world in which very-very small businesses have much-much more sway in shaping the economy, local living economies are thriving everywhere, and people value authorship and provenance as much as price and convenience.

It is instead "Truecrypt is very popular and nobody knows the provenance or trustworthiness of any of its low-level crypto design, and that needs to be fixed".The project makes more sense when you realize how untrustworthy that code might be today.

I would further bet that it would be a good time to be in Tokyo and capable of convincing a member of the Japanese establishment that one was willing and able to pay a substantial sum of yen, held at a reputable Japanese bank and having absolutely crystal clear provenance to a reputable business, for the impaired assets.

The provenance is equally unpalatable, from my point of view; Google may not be aiming for "extinguish", not least because that's not very likely with the web at this point, but it's certainly aiming for "embrace, extend, coopt", which is not much better.> That someone who appears to be speaking for MozillaIn general, people who work on Mozilla speak for themselves.

Provenance definitions

noun

where something originated or was nurtured in its early existence; "the birthplace of civilization"

See also: birthplace cradle provenience