Projection in a sentence as a noun

There's no sampling going on; it's a projection from past performance.

The majority of our users are looking down at the street level for businesses, directions, etc... so we're sticking with this projection for now.

So you go from a rectangular projection, which doesn't fit in the temple of your glasses, to a line projection, which does, traveling along the temple of the glasses.

For example, a projection could have accurate area ratios or accurately reflect point to point distances but not both.

In both cases, a micro/pico/nano-projector is fired into a holographic element that compresses the projection strongly in one axis.

The reason why the Mercator projection was popular for so long is that its angles correspond to compass points and you navigate by a trivial algorithm:1.

In the world of small website acquisitions, you'll be valued at something like 1X your previously proven annual revenue, not at a linear projection from what spike day looked like.

There was a digital projection system back in the 80's which had 60fps video, the output was much more 'real' in the sense of looking at the screen seemed more like you were looking at real life, and it jarred folks.

> I believe the current best guess is around 2 degrees C by 2050, > In short, the world of 2050 looks like it'll be almost unnoticeable warmerThe 2 degree C by 2050 projection is for if we stabilize CO2 emissions by 2020.

The border of this circle contains all the information of everything inside the circle, so the inside of the circle is a "holographic projection" of the information in the boundary.

Both the Vuzix lens and the Lumus lens have slightly different approaches, but essentially they have multipart holographic lenses embedded in the lens in front of your eye that uncompress the compressed axis section by section and split the projection out into your eye.

Projection definitions

noun

a prediction made by extrapolating from past observations

noun

the projection of an image from a film onto a screen

noun

a planned undertaking

See also: project

noun

any structure that branches out from a central support

noun

any solid convex shape that juts out from something

noun

(psychiatry) a defense mechanism by which your own traits and emotions are attributed to someone else

noun

the acoustic phenomenon that gives sound a penetrating quality; "our ukuleles have been designed to have superior sound and projection"; "a prime ingredient of public speaking is projection of the voice"

noun

the representation of a figure or solid on a plane as it would look from a particular direction

noun

the act of projecting out from something

See also: protrusion jutting

noun

the act of expelling or projecting or ejecting

See also: expulsion ejection