The revised FMC Sample Clauses

The revised FMC. The first version of the FMC employed an adaptation of the Combine1 open-source crawler and it was used for the construction of the first version of the in-domain monolingual corpora (MCv1) delivered as D4.3 Monolingual corpus acquired in five languages and two domains. Even though the default crawling strategy (the Breadth-First algorithm proposed by Xxxxxxxxx, 1994) was changed to a more efficient approach for focused crawling (the Best-First algorithm proposed by Xxx, 1998), the architecture of that version was not scalable for larger crawls. Since the issue of crawler’s scalability was raised in the first review report, we implemented a revised version of the FMC that adopts a distributed computing architecture based on Bixo2, an open source web mining toolkit that runs on top of Hadoop3 (a well-known framework for distributed data processing). In addition, Bixo also depends on the Heritrix4 web crawler and makes use of ideas developed in the Nutch5 web-search software project. These two open source frameworks for mining data from the web were mentioned as alternatives at the first review meeting by the reviewers. The MCv1 dataset consisted of monolingual corpora for English, Spanish, Italian, French and Greek in the Environment (ENV) and Labour Legislation (LAB) domains. The relatively small size of MCv1 (500-800 web documents for each language/domain combination, resulting to just more that 1M tokens for each combination) was mentioned in the review report as an indication of problems in the architecture of the initial FMC. Following this comment, we used the revised FMC to construct the second version of the monolingual corpora (MCv2) which targeted the same language/domain combinations. The size of the produced MCv2 corpora6 ranges from 13K to 28K web pages (26M to 70M tokens) depending on the selected domain (ENV or LAB) and the targeted language (EL, EN, ES, FR, IT). The only exception concerns the Greek data in the Labour Legislation domain, where only ~7K web pages were acquired. However, this collection amounts to ~21M tokens, since it consists mainly of large legal documents or lengthy discussions/arguments about Labour Legislation. More details about the quantity of the acquired data will be provided in the forthcoming D7.3 Second evaluation report, where the acquisition performance of the FMC will be discussed. 1 xxxx://xxxxxxx.xx.xxx.xx/documentation/ 2 xxxx://xxxxxxxx.xxx/ 3 xxxx://xxxxxx.xxxxxx.xxx/ 4 xxxx://xxxxxxx.xxxxxxx.xxx 5 xxxx://...
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Related to The revised FMC

  • Final Report Outline The Recipient shall Prepare a Final Report Outline in accordance with the Energy Commission Style Manual provided by the CAM. Recipient Products: • Final Report Outline (draft and final) CAM Product: • Energy Commission Style Manual • Comments on Draft Final Report Outline • Acceptance of Final Report Outline

  • Additional Customer Terms If any additional ordinance, rule, or other local governmental authority requires additional contract language before a Customer can make a purchase under this Contract, the Customer is responsible for entering a separate agreement with the Contractor and incorporating the additional contract language therein.

  • AUDIT REVIEW PROCEDURES A. Any dispute concerning a question of fact arising under an interim or post audit of this AGREEMENT that is not disposed of by AGREEMENT, shall be reviewed by LOCAL AGENCY’S Chief Financial Officer.

  • Minimum Site Requirements for TIPS Sales (when applicable to TIPS Sale). Cleanup: When performing work on site at a TIPS Member’s property, Vendor shall clean up and remove all debris and rubbish resulting from their work as required or directed by the TIPS Member or as agreed by the parties. Upon completion of work, the premises shall be left in good repair and an orderly, neat, clean and unobstructed condition. Preparation: Vendor shall not begin a project for which a TIPS Member has not prepared the site, unless Vendor does the preparation work at no cost, or until TIPS Member includes the cost of site preparation in the TIPS Sale Site preparation includes, but is not limited to: moving furniture, installing wiring for networks or power, and similar pre‐installation requirements. Registered Sex Offender Restrictions: For work to be performed at schools, Vendor agrees that no employee of Vendor or a subcontractor who has been adjudicated to be a registered sex offender will perform work at any time when students are, or reasonably expected to be, present unless otherwise agreed by the TIPS Member. Vendor agrees that a violation of this condition shall be considered a material breach and may result in the cancellation of the TIPS Sale at the TIPS Member’s discretion. Vendor must identify any additional costs associated with compliance of this term. If no costs are specified, compliance with this term will be provided at no additional charge. Safety Measures: Vendor shall take all reasonable precautions for the safety of employees on the worksite, and shall erect and properly maintain all necessary safeguards for protection of workers and the public. Vendor shall post warning signs against all hazards created by the operation and work in progress. Proper precautions shall be taken pursuant to state law and standard practices to protect workers, general public and existing structures from injury or damage. Smoking: Persons working under Agreement shall adhere to the TIPS Member’s or local smoking statutes, codes, ordinances, and policies.

  • Final Report The Recipient shall Prepare a Final Report for this Agreement in accordance with the approved Final Report Outline, Style Manual, and Final Report Template provided by the CAM with the following considerations: o Ensure that the report includes the following items, in the following order:  Cover page (required)  Credits page on the reverse side of cover with legal disclaimer (required)  Acknowledgements page (optional)  Preface (required)  Abstract, keywords, and citation page (required)  Table of Contents (required, followed by List of Figures and List of Tables, if needed)  Executive summary (required)  Body of the report (required)  References (if applicable)  Glossary/Acronyms (If more than 10 acronyms or abbreviations are used, it is required.)  Bibliography (if applicable)  Appendices (if applicable) (Create a separate volume if very large.)  Attachments (if applicable) o Ensure that the document is written in the third person. o Ensure that the Executive Summary is understandable to the lay public.  Briefly summarize the completed work. Succinctly describe the project results and whether or not the project goals were accomplished.  Identify which specific ratepayers can benefit from the project results and how they can achieve the benefits.  If it’s necessary to use a technical term in the Executive Summary, provide a brief definition or explanation when the technical term is first used.

  • ANNUAL MASTER CONTRACT SALES REPORT Contractor shall provide to Enterprise Services a detailed annual Master Contract sales report. Such report shall include, at a minimum: Product description, part number or other Product identifier, per unit quantities sold, and Master Contract price. This report must be provided in an electronic format that can be read by MS Excel.

  • Quote Review Each Quote received from the Contractor will be reviewed in detail for appropriateness of quantities and tasks selected. Submittals will be reviewed, as well as the Work duration schedule and list of Subcontractor. The County will evaluate the proposed Work units and may compare them with the independent County estimate of the same tasks to determine the reasonableness of approach, including the nature and number of Work units proposed. The County will determine whether the Contractor’s Quote is acceptable.

  • SITE VISITS AND RECORD REVIEW The Applicant shall allow authorized employees of the District, the Comptroller, the Appraisal District, and the State Auditor’s Office to have reasonable access to the Applicant’s Qualified Property and business records from the Application Review Start Date through the Final Termination Date, in order to inspect the project to determine compliance with the terms hereof or as necessary to properly appraise the Taxable Value of the Applicant’s Qualified Property.

  • Ongoing Review and Revisions As set forth in Section 35.7, the Parties have agreed to the coordination and exchange of data and information under this Agreement to enhance system reliability and efficient market operations as systems exist and are contemplated as of the Effective Date. The Parties expect that these systems and the technology applicable to these systems and to the collection and exchange of data will change from time to time throughout the term of this Agreement. The Parties agree that the objectives of this Agreement can be fulfilled efficiently and economically only if the Parties, from time to time, review and, as appropriate, revise the requirements stated herein in response to such changes, including deleting, adding, or revising requirements and protocols. Each Party will negotiate in good faith in response to such revisions the other Party may propose from time to time. Nothing in this Agreement, however, shall require any Party to reach agreement with respect to any such changes, or to purchase, install, or otherwise implement new equipment, software, or devices, or functions, except as required to perform this Agreement.

  • COMPTROLLER’S REPORT ON CHAPTER 313 AGREEMENTS During the term of this Agreement, both Parties shall provide the Comptroller with all information reasonably necessary for the Comptroller to assess performance under this Agreement for the purpose of issuing the Comptroller’s report, as required by Section 313.032 of the TEXAS TAX CODE.

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