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Look up: traceability

  1. Traceability
    The evidence of an association between items, such as between process outputs, between an output and its originating process, or between a requirement and its implementation.
    Found on http://sparc.airtime.co.uk/users/wysywig

  2. Traceability
    The ability for parts to be identified and their origins found. Traceability of Anson products means that throughout the supply chain you can be assured of only the highest quality.
    Found on http://www.anson.co.uk/oilfield_glossary

  3. Traceability
    A property of the result of a measurement or the value of a standard whereby it can be related to stated references, usually national or international standards, through an unbroken chain of comparisons all having stated uncertainties.
    Found on http://www.nmschembio.org.uk/GenericArti

  4. Traceability
    the degree to which each element in a software development product establishes its reason for existing Category: Automation (includes telecommunications and computers) • the degree to which a relationship can be established between two or more products of the development process,especially products having a predecessor-successor or master-subordinate relationship to one another Cate...
    Found on http://www.mijnwoordenboek.nl/definition

  5. Traceability
    Refers to the completeness of the information about every step in a process chain. :: Bord Bia (10th Edition)
    Found on http://www.business2000.ie/resources/Glo

  6. Traceability
    `Traceability` refers to the completeness of the information about every step in a process chain. The formal definition: `Traceability` is ability to chronologically interrelate the uniquely identifiable entities in a way that matters. Traceability is the ability to verify the history, location, or application of an item by means of recorded identification. The term traceability is for example used to refer to an unbroken chain of measurements...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traceabilit

  7. traceability
    in electronic money systems, the degree to which value-transfer transactions can be traced to the originator(s) or the recipient(s) of the transfer.…
    Found on http://www.oenb.at/dictionary/termini.js

  8. traceability
    The ability to identify related items in documentation and software, such as requirements with associated tests. See also horizontal traceability, vertical traceability.…
    Found on http://www.imbus.de/glossary/glossary.pl

  9. traceability
    property of the result of a measurement or of the value of a standard such that it can be related to stated references, usually national or international standards, through an unbroken chain of comparisons all having stated uncertainties NOTE 1 - The concept is often expressed by the adjective traceable. NOTE 2 - The unbroken chain of comparisons i...
    Found on http://www.electropedia.org/iev/iev.nsf/

  10. traceability
    unbroken chain of measurements of a radiation quantity to the appropriate reference of that quantity NOTE 1 - the reference is usually a national standard. NOTE 2 - The concept is often expressed by the adjective traceable. NOTE 3 - The unbroken chain of comparisons is called a traceability chain. NOTE 4 - For more details, see IVM 6.10.
    Found on http://www.electropedia.org/iev/iev.nsf/


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23 November 2009

This day in history:
At sixteen minutes past five on 23rd November 1963, a British television institution was born. Doctor Who would go on to become the longest-running science-fiction programme in the world, eventually spawning twenty six seasons of adventures from 1963 to 1989. In total, eight actors have played the part of Gallifrey's most famous Time Lord. From the very first - William Hartnell in 1963 - to the very last - Paul McGann, in the 1996 TV Movie - the Doctor has wandered through time and space in his trusty time machine, an old type-40 TARDIS (Time and Relative Dimensions in Space). Although appearing to be nothing more than a battered blue police box, it is in fact vastly bigger on the inside than on the outside, and always departs with its familiar wheezing, groaning sound. read more

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