Compartmentalization in a sentence as a noun

This kind of compartmentalization is not my strong suit. I have the same issue with personal projects.

Tl;dr: The intense compartmentalization and secrecy at Apple are most painful for the people who love the company the most.

However, with sufficient compartmentalization, they don't know what they or others are truly doing. Same can be true for any company.

It's all about compartmentalization. For any/all its faults, that's an astoundingly immense value.

More generally, compartmentalization isn't hypocrisy. Everyone has the programs that they like and the ones they don't.

I am guessing for some projects this compartmentalization leads to the dilution of guilt." Hey I only build detonators", "I only build the shell", "I build the remote control", "I only leave the device in a certain place without know what it is".

I don't think that journalists are really knowledgeable at all about intelligence community is supposed to handle compartmentalization. They think the NSA handles things just like they do at their paper.

Surely a company of Facebook's size would experience some fairly great benefits from compartmentalization and published service interfaces. I guess I agree with the parent - sounds like a lot of intertwined spaghetti code.

We're talking about police-state levels of secrecy and compartmentalization. This obviously has a huge cost, so assuming the policy is rational it must have an even huger value.

It's new in that they made a nice abstraction on top of the Linux clone of Solaris containers then marketed the **** out of it so everybody became aware of non-VM compartmentalization and fine grained resource allocation. In short: still awesome, but not "they invented it" new.

Over-classification and compartmentalization solves all of those problems by covering them up.

You are absolutely correct about the compartmentalization and physical separation of classified and unclassified systems. I disagree that this is about keeping "clean" systems clean.

Second, because eBay believes more in compartmentalization, secrecy, misdirection etc. than 'openness'.

I clearly remember be stunned, and initially not believing, that any one person, even a sysadmin, would have such broad access to systems at the NSA. It goes against everything that intelligence agencies have learned about compartmentalization of information and "need to know" access controls.

Intelligence agencies are in the business of gathering, recording, analyzing and cross referencing information, and then producing reports -- all while maintaining compartmentalization to a degree that would be insane in most other contexts. You should never outsource your value proposition.

Programmers probably have the highest tolerance I know of for compartmentalization of tasks and poor interaction design and data visualization: they are extremely intelligent and have the ability to tie things together in their heads and break down tasks and tools ad hoc. But when you don't have to do that, when programming becomes easier and more fluid, things will start happening that simply couldn't before.

Technically, you're correct, but believing in a deity similar to the Abrahamic god and also accepting evolution is usually a sign of compartmentalization. You reach an acceptance of evolution by examining the evidence, and you reach a belief of god by starting from an unfalsifiable conclusion.

Library self-compartmentalization - we are adapting a number of commonly-used libraries, such as compression and image processing libraries, to automatically execute risky portions of their code in capability mode sandboxes. This will allow largely or entirely unmodified applications, such as web browers, to benefit from lightweight and easy-to-deploy sandboxing.

Compartmentalization definitions

noun

a mild state of dissociation

See also: compartmentalisation

noun

the act of distributing things into classes or categories of the same type

See also: categorization categorisation classification compartmentalisation assortment