Defective in a sentence as an adjective

So, yes, 100K "defective" displays might go out the door in the blink of an eye.

They were tested on assembly lines to pick out defective parts.

DRM is defective by design and no matter how much you try painting this crow, it's still a crow.

If your cycle count is 223 and you are nearing 80%, then your battery is defective, plain and simple.

Based on past evidence, our products being defective likely means customers would speak up about it.

Our customers haven't complained to us ----- C: Our products are probably not defective.

But that's because of licensing and scaling issues, not because the .NET stack is somehow defective.

Here are the 3% defective parts as you requested, packaged separately for your convenience.

It can be a hundred reasons, it is either a bad/defective kite, it may not be windy enough, or you have to run faster for it to fly.

Your identical story happened to me. I never received a third unit to replace the second defective unit.

Eventually the superior paths created by Musk are the preferred ones to use, and the defective paths are garbage collected.

We may be the ones, like our founding fathers, who have to write up a new constitution, bill of rights, and spawn a new nation to break away from the defective one.

The fault in logic comes from P1 not being true: it is not necessarily the case that customers would complain to the company if the product was defective.

"The author correctly points out that this formally follows the modus tollens format: A: Our products are defective B: Customers are complaining to us P1.

If you publish something on the internet and it turns out be wrong or defective, you have a moral obligation to point that out, especially if better alternatives are available.

By establishing extroversion and median IQ as "ideal," we're insinuating that the introverted and gifted are somehow defective.

The company, should they be claiming to make this argument, would have to be amenable to be proven wrong: while it may be unlikely that customers would remain silent if their product was defective, it's certainly possible.

When "binning" refers to the practice of putting premium prices on parts that test as being capable of operating at higher clock speeds or lower voltages, that's good for the consumer. When it refers to die harvesting - selling the chip with a defective section disabled - that's also good for the consumer. When it refers to crippling a chip that has already passed QA, it's a symptom of insufficient competitive pressure.

Defective definitions

adjective

having a defect; "I returned the appliance because it was defective"

See also: faulty

adjective

markedly subnormal in structure or function or intelligence or behavior; "defective speech"

adjective

not working properly; "a bad telephone connection"; "a defective appliance"