Incubation in a sentence as a noun

I'd be curious to know what the results of this survey question were from companies that made it to the first round but were not selected for the incubation phase.

Ebola has an incubation period which can be longer than two weeks, and the disease can be transmitted during the incubation period.

$14k to $20k is irrelevant if you need 3 years R&D and/or $5M capital to prototype; we need new metrics for funding businesses with high capital cost and/or long incubation time.

I won't say it's impossible, but we don't even know enough to know whether the three things: high mortality, long incubation, and ease of transmission are even possible.

What happens when someone creates a virus that spreads extremely easily, has greater than 50% mortality, and has an incubation period of several weeks?

It's best to view the current Silicon Valley euphoria as a testbed for new technologies and labor processes and as an incubation chamber for the next generation working class.

Ebola has an incubation period, there is a period of time where you are infectious, before its obvious, and if airborne your very presence places anyone in the room with you now has 50/50 odds of living.

The original iPhone was incubated inside the company for roughly half a decade, and it's likely Apple's next big product is maybe halfway through a similar incubation period.

>Project Sputnik, a product of Dells new internal incubation fund, features not just full hardware support for Ubuntu on the XPS13, but a notion of profiles for developersThey could have stopped at "full hardware support for Ubuntu".

His scenario is hypothetical with quick estimates of mortality and incubation period.

Airbnb, who Dave uses as an example of a billionaire startup club member, is the definition of an underdog making the big time through pure hustle -- I seem to recall a story about selling cereal boxes to make ends meet before funding started to pour in post incubation

There are simply too many examples of basic research with seemingly no value to anything of practical interest that turn out to be very value in industry and medicine some years down the road to dismiss incubation of purely theoretical work offhand.

Incubation definitions

noun

maintaining something at the most favorable temperature for its development

noun

(pathology) the phase in the development of an infection between the time a pathogen enters the body and the time the first symptoms appear

noun

sitting on eggs so as to hatch them by the warmth of the body

See also: brooding