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User Feedback. The Licensee has no obligation to provide the Licensor with any ideas, suggestions, proposals, information, data, bug reports, observation or other comments in respect of the HSC (“Feedback”). However, if the Licensee, its Affiliates or Users submit any Feedback to the Licensor, in such event the Licensee grants the Licensor a non- exclusive, perpetual, worldwide, royalty-free license, which is sub-licensable and transferable, to make, use, sell, have made, offer to sell, import, reproduce, publicly display, distribute, modify and publicly perform or otherwise utilize the Feedback in any manner without any obligation, royalty, remuneration, compensation or restriction based on intellectual property rights or otherwise. However, the Licensor will not be granted rights as defined in the preceding paragraph, if the Licensee delivers files or ideas to the Licensor and specifies these ones as “Confidential”. For example, the Licensor will keep in the strictest confidence process model applications and application files of the HSC Modules that the Licensee gives the Licensor and specifies as “Confidential”.
User Feedback. 5.1. If You provide ActiveState with feedback about the ActiveState Platform You consent to us using Your feedback without restriction or any obligation to You.
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User Feedback. User may voluntarily provide comments, suggestions, enhancement or modification requests, recommendations, proposals, ideas, and other feedback relating to the Honeywell AI or otherwise (collectively, “Feedback”). User hereby assigns to Honeywell (and shall cause its employees, contractors, and agents to assign to Honeywell) all right, title, and interest in, and Honeywell is free to use, without any attribution or compensation to any party, any Feedback and intellectual property rights contained in the Feedback, for any purpose whatsoever, whether or not the Feedback was provided at Honeywell’s request. Honeywell is not required to hold any Feedback in confidence, pay compensation for any Feedback, implement or use any Feedback, or respond to any Feedback.
User Feedback. Upon Harvard’s request, Service Provider shall notify Harvard of accessibility complaints from users of the Deliverables. Upon Harvard’s request, Service Provider shall incorporate into the Deliverables a method by which users may contact knowledgeable persons to report difficulties accessing or using the Deliverables and to direct comments, questions, and complaints regarding accessibility. Service Provider shall resolve all accessibility complaints that describe Non-Conformance with the same level of priority as remedying any equivalent loss of function for individuals without disabilities.
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User Feedback. User Feedback is the feedback acquired directly from user actions regarding an item of a previous recommendation. The feedback will act as a rating weight on creating specific recommendation systems that make use of the user feedback. User feedback can be in the form of: • The user upvoting/downvoting (Like or unlike) the recommendation item • The recommendation item was chosen from a user during a previous recommendation • The traffic (a sum of views, likes, discussions) around the recommendation item.
User Feedback. The SC mentioned the issue that the fire fighter’s HMD was difficult to see whilst wearing a BA face mask. He also mentioned that the video appeared blurry on the FRS-C and that he could not adequately carry out his task using the video as he could not see the location of the fire fighter. He did say that if the fire fighter wearing the video sensor moved slowly then the image was moderate. The SC suggested that the progress of using streaming video was moving in the right direction. The first fire fighter mentioned that if all of the protective equipment was to be worn then he would not have been able to see the HMD. A second fire fighter suggested that an auto tilt HMD with voice control might be a good idea however he also mentioned that this might be an issue in an operational environment as audibility is very low. This section lists the advantages and disadvantages of wearable displays and sensors based upon experience, trials results and user-feedback
3.1 Wearable Displays The role of a display is to communicate information to the user. The user can potentially have a number of different information sources, radio, HUD, WMD etc. One of the real benefits of wearable displays is that the information is durable whereas with radio communication it is instantaneous/temporary i.e. Once the user has been sent a message over radio he/she has to remember the information, whereas when using a wearable display the information can remain on the screen allowing the user to refer back to it when required. In the same vein using wearable displays with a well designed user interface, the system can display information in much more efficient ways than traditional communications methods e.g. information displayed in picture format such as maps and charts etc. can be interpreted and processed by the user much quicker than radio messages communicating the same data. A good summary for these differences is that a wearable display can effectively present information in parallel to the user and can retain that information for review whereas the radio communicates information in a serial fashion and that information is not retained for review. In this document we are concerned with wearable displays and one of the biggest advantages of them is that they can predominantly be used hands-free. For the COPE fire fighter a HMD was used which allowed the fire fighter to view data by simply looking up at the brow of the helmet. Likewise with the WMD the fire fighter can view data ...