Jitters in a sentence as a noun

I think that the mention of "post Steve" jitters is largely false. OSX has never been perfect and has always had quirks.

Often, I'll get jitters after a single cup of coffee. I restrict my caffeine intake because of this.

Facebook's long term prospects will be built on the quality of their products, not the jitters of the short term investor.

I like both the taste and the ritual of coffee, but don't like the jitters it gives me if I have more than one or two cups a day. So I typically switch to decaf after the first cup, and still enjoy the rest.

For restaurants that aren't chains, processes may not be tried and tested -- first week jitters, ****, first month/quarter jitters should be accounted for.

Flat out, less anxiety, less jitters, and a large increase in focus. Creatine flat out helps all around with physical performance, and may help out with some mental performance as well.

>The big idea is to make caffeine palatable to people who get the jitters from coffee and energy drinks. Four sprays, the recommended dose, has less caffeine than a cup of coffee, Yu says.

But, for many years, after one bad experience, I just couldn't shake the jitters. I needed a way to break the vicious cycle of one bad experience leading to more bad experiences.

Just calling Visa to try to report it gave me the same kind of jitters, I really hate it. I will, however, report the information I have in my possession to my local police department.

I get jitters writing Ruby sometimes now because I know I'm fallible and I have to store so much more in my mind in order to reason about it.

Their interpreters and jitters are likely written in C. There are exceptions. I understand that some Java-based systems are built in Java, all the way to the metal.

Speaking from my experience, babies dont really cry when the plane is coasting, theyre triggered by jitters. Belated material Malaysia Airlines bans babies from first class outright [1].

I'm getting good, I think, at spotting signals that are probably the result of jitters. And I think I've learned pretty conclusively that those jitters have zero correlation to on-the-job performance.

Mate doesn't give me the jitters, doesn't burn my stomach and it's very low-maintenance compared to tea, which needs to be left just this much time before it becomes a bitter, undrinkable blargh.

Never heard anyone suggest that add/adhd/being unable to focus/caffeine jitters can decrease productivity? Seems like exactly the kind of assumption without evidence that would warrant studying.

So some people from the telecom or HPC community who have much experience with lags and timing jitters can contribute their experitse. [1] I don't mean to disrespect the author, just point out that he's probably not involved with the experiment at all.

For users, milliseconds of jitters and blockiness everywhere is a huge turn off. It feels like the device is struggling to handle simple tasks and it destroys the belief in the UI metaphor of physical objects that have inertia and flow, stretch and bounce when you touch and flick them.

When I drink a lot caffeine or other energy drinks in a short period of time, I find that they will give me a mild case of the jitters, but even then, they don't counteract my actual drowsiness. Hence, I've never gone higher than my typical cup of coffee in the morning and frequently a soda in the afternoon.

As an interviewee I do my best to stand up and walk around during an interview; anything to get the brain and charisma going and the jitters forgotten is good for developing a rapport.

> I would have appreciated if you would also had described the downsides of using DynASM compared to other jitters. The article wasn't meant to be a comparative evaluation of DynASM vs other dynamic code generation engines.

Overcome jitters, rewrite major application with great success. Read about electrical engineering, and Haskell.

The trade-off between keystrokes and CPU cycles isn't really even all that much of a thing anymore, what with jitters closing the gap on one side of the fence, and type inference and generics closing it on the other.

I then made some changes to our software to try to minimize the effects of the natural movements of the hand -- I turned down the sensitivity to attempt to compensate for the normal shakes and jitters that you have with your hands. This gave it a better feel, but, the traffic reporters still missed the feeling of touching the display and watching that display interact with your touch.

I sincerely doubt there's a way to differentiate between someone who is ill and someone who is pale and has the jitters because they're about to do something bad. I moreover call foul on the notion that there are enough of the latter set to build an effective training program to create effective BDOs. What's actually happening here is probably that BDOs are being used to justify retroactively special treatment given to people for invented reasons.

Jitters definitions

noun

extreme nervousness

See also: heebie-jeebies