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577 Sentences With "tradeoff"

How to use tradeoff in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "tradeoff" and check conjugation/comparative form for "tradeoff". Mastering all the usages of "tradeoff" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It's a reasonable explanation for the tradeoff, but it's still very much a tradeoff.
"It's a tradeoff, but it's a tradeoff that I think many will take," he said.
In other words, the big tradeoff is cold hard cash.
The tradeoff was frequently not in a patient's best interest.
The traditional tradeoff often pits reducing pollution against economic growth.
Here's another tradeoff: between traditional air pollution and climate change.
That tradeoff limits how much biofuel can be made overall.
For larger households, the tradeoff might leave them worse off.
Isn't that a fair tradeoff for getting rid of it?
Every growing company faces a tradeoff in growth and profitability.
As Bosworth notes, it's a classic tradeoff between two values.
In fact, this tradeoff could very well reduce the deficit.
Still, for this kind of horsepower, the tradeoff isn't entirely unreasonable.
That's the tradeoff you have to accept for the smaller size.
It's a tradeoff the Chinese government have been willing to make.
TIM COOK: It's not a tradeoff, is the answer to that.
It's a tradeoff that increasingly looks like a really good deal.
If you're sacrificing sleep for exercise, is that a good tradeoff?
Generally, drug policy experts agree that this tradeoff is worth it.
Its smaller size and extra features are worth the size tradeoff.
Such is the tradeoff of going to medium format, of course.
It's because there's a real tradeoff between sulfur and carbon dioxide.
The tradeoff: On the one hand, there's an eye-popping price.
Third, there's a tradeoff here between public accountability and private accountability.
Floral arrangements This is another area where a tradeoff is inevitable.
Source: AlixPartners But there's a tradeoff to consider, according to O'Keefe.
The tradeoff is that there will be markedly fewer polling places.
In the current climate, that may not be a worthwhile tradeoff.
First, Lerner really neglected the tradeoff between monetary and fiscal policy.
"I understand there are less opportunities for differences in flavor [in pasteurized soft cheese], but for me personally I don't want to make the tradeoff and I'm worried the average consumer doesn't understand that tradeoff."[Buzzfeed]
"It's clear there's a tradeoff between migration and market access," Pickering added.
But that's the tradeoff that fully secured end-to-end encryption requires.
The tradeoff between costs and benefits still matters for new drugs, too.
For a gaming laptop especially, this is more than an acceptable tradeoff.
The reality is that this is rarely the tradeoff offered to founders.
But as Rico-Guevara pointed out, it's a tradeoff that makes sense.
With Durant in the fold, that tradeoff should be even more reliable.
The tradeoff is that the images captured are of much lower quality.
Every tradeoff in a billion-dollar market is going to hurt someone.
A couple of wrinkled shirts seems well worth the tradeoff for me.
I am here to illuminate the tradeoff, not to decide for you.
I would definitely take that tradeoff—no doubt about it at all.
Waze is a great example of a tradeoff between privacy and value.
In other words, the world faces a classic explore-versus-exploit tradeoff.
What would the public -- especially Republicans -- make of that sort of tradeoff?
The tradeoff is that those familiar faces generally squeezed out deserving newcomers.
"There's a tradeoff between size and precision of the variables," he said.
The lawmakers "agree" with that tradeoff, they wrote in their Friday letter.
And in my mind, no ice cream makes the tradeoff worth it.
Still, some feel that positioning creativity against representation politics is a false tradeoff.
If you work in Trump's White House, however, it's surely a worthwhile tradeoff.
That's the tradeoff — or it was, rather, until Verb introduced Ghost Dry Oil.
Again, the tradeoff for the larger batteries is the extra thickness and weight.
Some people might not like the tradeoff, but it's a perfectly plausible idea.
That's a tradeoff that I for one am tentatively, optimistically, willing to accept.
Only 27 percent of people found this tradeoff acceptable; 55 percent did not.
We'll take the performance tradeoff in exchange for dropping an all-carbon top.
But not reducing rates in the first place could avoid that tradeoff altogether.
You've got to be OK with that tradeoff, at least for a while.
The problem is that there is a nutritional tradeoff of sorts with milk.
This is, in a way, the fundamental tradeoff of single-payer health care.
Silicon Valley philanthropy veterans counter that this isn't a one-to-one tradeoff.
But those two nice properties come with a big tradeoff: Blockchains can't scale.
She concedes there is a definite tradeoff between safety and independence in today's parenting.
Cramer understood the tradeoff, but he says it's too soon to tell who's right.
Another tradeoff: the Go doesn't support the $99 Pixelbook Pen, Google tells Android Police.
What looks like a tradeoff can often be recast as a win-win situation.
If the "scholarship" tradeoff doesn't provide any actual scholarship, what else can be done?
But the wireless competition is expensive enough that it might be a worthwhile tradeoff.
The tradeoff, however, is cuts to principal averaging 46 percent, or $23 billion total.
If the answer is they can't, that's a major [user experience] tradeoff for security.
Our first concern was whether we'd have tradeoff or trade down from existing customers.
That tradeoff, the CBO projected, would results in 21625,2900 fewer people living in poverty.
During one early sildenafil-fueled session, I realized that the tradeoff was becoming untenable.
But the tradeoff is much less ability to use their preferred doctors and hospitals.
Could this recommended tradeoff conceivably make any sense for America's overall foreign policy objectives?
This is a bad tradeoff because export jobs are generally higher productivity and pay.
Discounts are always great, but it's a tradeoff that some weren't willing to make.
For the clumsiest among us, the new look probably isn't worth the potential tradeoff.
But there is also one huge area where no such tradeoff exists: economic policy.
"It's basically a tradeoff … between utility and handing over your consumer data," he said.
The Federal Reserve would face a difficult tradeoff between supporting growth or stabilizing prices.
FEWER POLLING PLACES The tradeoff is that there will be markedly fewer polling places.
"The reality is you have to make that tradeoff with any investor," Basir said.
I didn't think there needed to be a tradeoff between my health and my appearance.
"There's work to do to make it easier to figure out this tradeoff," says Radebaugh.
"Everything's a tradeoff," I can now say with the lame assurance of a grown-up.
Arkose has a different approach, and uses a bilateral approach that doesn't force this tradeoff.
Compared to a speedier processor, the Snapdragon 625's tradeoff in performance is usually imperceptible.
It's a tradeoff for fuel economy, with a projected EPA rating of 24 mpg combined.
To make that tradeoff is to prioritize being an environmentalist over being a climate hawk.
It's a strange tradeoff to make, but apparently the NHL feels like it's worth it.
This is a tradeoff that many other countries — including especially China — have refused to make.
And the first by far priority is safety and there is no tradeoff on that.
But "if everyone around you is paying bribes, the cost-benefit tradeoff flips," he continued.
The tradeoff, such as it is, is that the few significant new characters scarcely register.
According to this tradeoff, every 28503 million new jobs increases inflation rate by 22019 percent.
But the tradeoff is that he sometimes goes fishing on his lunch break, he says.
Now, the fiscal-monetary tradeoff isn't the only place where I have problems with MMT.
This kind of tradeoff, in many ways, will come to define the Obama administration's legacy.
Of course, as with all large mechanical systems like this, there’s a small tradeoff.
It's a tradeoff: in return, there's no limitation on how frequently you can use self-repair.
The tradeoff between inflation and unemployment is the subject of a longstanding debate at the Fed.
It ends up being a tradeoff between accuracy of the data you are collecting and privacy.
This shows that, during the miniaturization process, there's a tradeoff between genome size and growth rate.
Forty-five percent deemed the tradeoff unacceptable, with only 37 percent of respondents finding it acceptable.
It's a good tradeoff that might not work for everyone, but still a game I enjoyed.
The 1996 welfare overhaul signed into law by Bill Clinton was built on the same tradeoff.
"It's a tradeoff," lead researcher and author of a new book, iGen, Jean Twenge tells Axios.
In other words, it would pose a totally unacceptable tradeoff that would inevitably hurt school quality.
But that's the tradeoff you have to be willing to make to be on the platform.
Really, you're just going to have to accept that there's often a tradeoff to our dreams.
So the tradeoff has to be that you get a massive benefit from using the Assistant.
What it may offer is a basic tradeoff: cover more people, but with fewer guaranteed benefits.
The tradeoff is weight: the (interchangeable) seat weighs seven pounds, and the frame weighs 22 pounds.
This tradeoff initially met strong resistance, because some politicians want to protect Japan's dwindling dairy industry.
Not bad for a tradeoff, but that&aposs entirely dependent on the final price, of course.
"The privacy and accuracy tradeoff is real," Canopy founder and CEO Brian Whitman said over email.
"It becomes a tradeoff of economics, access to data, things of that nature," Barrios told me.
U.-country harmonized pricing that balances the innovation-access tradeoff that the U.S. currently privately faces.
But the rise of portable benefits solutions means that we shouldn't have to make this tradeoff.
Venture capitalists and hedge funds use the rule to calculate the tradeoff in growth and profitability.
Many single parents could find that tradeoff leaves them with a higher tax bill, the study found.
Popular encrypted chat app Signal added video this week, although it comes with a potential privacy tradeoff.
It's a rough tradeoff for what has come to be vital work in the age of misinformation.
That's the tradeoff we have to get comfortable with to make these more prominent in our culture.
But, but, but: There's a tradeoff in using CO2 for producing oil that's later burned in engines.
"There's a tradeoff you're making in using these services," said Soltani, who advocated the California privacy law.
Early indications are that they probably won't be, in which case it would be a bad tradeoff.
So does the tradeoff between reduce liquidity, less flexibility and the ability to drive outcomes, compensate us?
Pew gave 505 participants six scenarios and asked if the privacy tradeoff was worth the returned reward.
In this case, people ages 2353 and older were most likely to find it an unacceptable tradeoff.
President Trump's new executive order on immigration may be a classic example of a risk-risk tradeoff.
There are versions of this tradeoff, not yet embodied in this legislation, that liberals should happily consider.
The tradeoff with registries has been the harassment of those on them at their homes and workplaces.
"The tradeoff here is we know that doing this could expose people to incredible vulnerabilities," Cook said.
One tradeoff is that when unemployment is below a certain level then the inflation rate should increase.
I suppose as long as Microsoft keeps this app fast and well-maintained, it's worth the tradeoff.
At a time when we need to be strengthening Social Security, this perverse tradeoff does the opposite.
That's why an investment in sports, from Little League to private coaching, almost always requires a tradeoff.
The tradeoff Trump sabotaged — pricing out at $28503,22019 a head for the Dreamers — though expedient, was unworthy.
"It's the tradeoff retailers are forced to make and to be honest there's no easy answer," Bassuk said.
The tradeoff, though, was that the cleaner the tailpipe emissions got, the worse the engine's fuel economy became.
But this tradeoff — more savings, less innovation — is at the core of the debate about lowering drug costs.
"The larger the grid, the longer it takes to run the computation — so it's a tradeoff," Brennan says.
However, more royalties for copyrights and patents are a tradeoff for a larger trade deficit in manufactured goods.
But it becomes a tradeoff then-- as to when are you taking away provisions that do real good.
The charger is a bit bulkier than you'll get with most phones, but the tradeoff is worth it.
There's also a tradeoff between drop resistance and scratch resistance, which Corning has admitted to in the past.
The controller doesn't sacrifice the best features of its predecessor, though, so don't worry about an unfair tradeoff.
The tradeoff, of course, is admirable—the company wants to provide the necessary resources during especially vulnerable moments.
Every year, the tradeoff is real: What panel are you willing to sacrifice in order to see another?
The tradeoff for speed, which is so crucial to delivering online content nowadays, is a hefty price tag.
The tradeoff for the user is, of course, a loss of privacy for the gain of greater automation.
The tradeoff is that now more than ever, South by is very hard for a civilian to navigate.
They've built clocks that use different atoms and approaches to try to address this tradeoff, with varying success.
But I found the weight — still under two pounds — to be an acceptable tradeoff for the nice keyboard.
It's also one of the most affordable bikes that Zero makes, with the tradeoff being power and range.
The tradeoff is that it's a little more expensive than most of the other cables in our guide.
Trudeau himself has acknowledged that pipeline approval "was always a tradeoff" for Alberta's acceptance of the climate plan.
But those cuts never really materialized, apparently in a tradeoff to get the Trump tax cuts bill passed.
There are tradeoffs among priorities, and eschewing 9.45 TWh of carbon-free energy is a big-ass tradeoff.
A lack of institutional investors could be a very expensive long-term tradeoff for a short-term gain.
Which means that the tradeoff between solar development and historic charm may really be about weighing material benefits.
The tradeoff is is in bulk, weight, and having to deal with Bluetooth pairing and Micro USB charging.
What's more, there's little reason to believe the sharp ideological tradeoff often posited by mobilization proponents really exists.
Proponents say this tradeoff is needed because drug companies routinely misuse strict REMS procedures to ward off competition.
There's this delicate tradeoff that brands navigate between being distinctive and unique, and being broadly relevant and appealing.
The company made a design decision regarding security keys that's more of a tradeoff, or, at worst, a vulnerability.
Politics is full of tradeoffs, but to Clinton (like Barack Obama before her) there actually is no tradeoff here.
The tradeoff is that Spencer cannot jump, only maneuver by swooping around like a spider caught in the breeze.
TThe tradeoff of ShatterShield is that since the front layer is plastic, it'll scratch much easier than other phones.
But that built-in cable comes with a minor tradeoff: There's only one 10W fast-charging USB-A part.
Warren — more like Trump — embraces the tradeoff and simply says that politicians should put Americans' interests ahead of foreigners.
That would be the tradeoff, and we are really not getting it particularly for people at the bottom end.
And so, he may be willing to tradeoff the nuclear power if we come in and with building infrastructure.
But the tradeoff is slower aperture, which is f/3.3 - 6.4 compared to f/2.8 - 5.9 from the ZS100.
Of course, I made the decision to sacrifice these fun communal life experiences for the tradeoff of saving money.
For most people, it's a worthy tradeoff for free email, detailed maps, and free access to nearly unlimited information.
"It's just a tradeoff between the need for Congress to set priorities and the need to prevent a shutdown."
It resonated with me in a big way because I almost made the same "tradeoff," as she called it.
The tradeoff is that you get asymmetrical speaker grills so if that kind of thing annoys you you're welcome.
But this type of short-term tradeoff frequently leads to corruption, waste and abuse, giving aid a bad name.
Since time is a tradeoff between throughput, latency, number of computers, and geographic distribution, the tests demonstrate these tradeoffs.
But, grounded in mainstream economic theory, both sides agreed that there is always a tradeoff between wages and jobs.
But, in exchange, secured credit cards can be easier to qualify for and that can be a worthy tradeoff.
But generally speaking, the tradeoff is you get to use this for free, we get to follow and target.
As a tradeoff, Democratic leaders in Congress and the White House secured an extension of renewable energy tax breaks.
It favored assumed restraints on the nuclear progress of Iran in a tradeoff for providing sanctions relief to Tehran.
There's a bit of a tradeoff in that taking shots from the hip has become more of a process.
"It was an awful tradeoff, and my perception is that they are paying for it now," Soriano-Núñez said.
The tradeoff is that Oscars put Kimmel under a microscope, simply by virtue of the size of the stage.
Whatever you choose, consider the tradeoff between your yield and safety, and strive to select a low-cost option.
But the tradeoff is that they're huge, like the size of a backpack, expensive, and not available for consumers.
That was not the tradeoff we wanted — we wanted to create a device that solved this unique set of problems.
But several scientists worry this is not the right tradeoff between robust research and industry influence, statistical power and ethics.
But if a bit of similarity improves someone's understanding of Twitter, Kim and Coleman seem happy to make that tradeoff.
Annual median salary: $201,250 Military generals are the highest-paid professionals outside of health care, but the tradeoff is steep.
And in the areas of momentum and the areas of productivity and performance there is no contradiction there's no tradeoff.
The battery problem: Computing can be a tradeoff between the computation to be made and the energy that it requires.
If the infrastructure projects Trump ends up building are useful, that could be a good tradeoff in the long-run.
That's a tradeoff I'm willing to make – the TabPro S is more of a productivity device than entertainment tool anyways.
The movie barely features West himselfI can't even expect West's die-hard fans to be happy with this pricey tradeoff.
In contrast, we ask parents to make a tradeoff that betrays the family values so many of our leaders profess.
SO EVER bugged me a bit, but I was happy with everything else, so I decided to accept the tradeoff.
While some suggest a tradeoff between the environment and the economy, the forest products sector demonstrates we can have both.
But perhaps the biggest tradeoff Exxon wants in exchange for supporting a carbon tax is immunity from climate change lawsuits.
Many rejected the explicit tradeoff in the White House proposal between legalizing current unauthorized immigrants and barring future legal immigrants.
"There is always a tradeoff," says Michelle Gong, chief of critical care at the Montefiore Health System in the Bronx.
It posed a simple tradeoff: In exchange for Tehran agreeing to limit its nuclear capabilities, economic sanctions would be lifted.
To understand the tradeoff, consider Bank A, which engages in complete maturity transformation, and Bank B, which engages in none.
" Joseph Biden himself also ruled out any testimony tradeoff, saying of the president, "I'm not going to play his game.
Some may argue that this is a fair tradeoff for ensuring everyone in society can take advantage of the internet.
Balancing this tradeoff is key to having robust software and services companies make your platform the best place for innovation.
There was a tradeoff: where it might have made sense for Sanchez's future, it also was disruptive for the other starters.
One thing you quickly learn as you start to amass piles of purple and yellow rarity gear: there's always a tradeoff.
The tradeoff: Twitter helped Trump kill his primary opponents, and allowed him to circumvent negative mainstream media coverage during the campaign.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell discussed the issue in May, along with the idea of adding more playoff teams as a tradeoff.
The same tradeoff at the center of the internet — personal information for convenience — is at play with trendy new food robots.
The tradeoff of decentralization is that there's no one to blame for what a fucked up place the internet truly is.
Astro Gaming headsets have always been a tradeoff: you get premium audio, but you pay a high price for it — literally.
Until now that decision has involved a tradeoff: you gain a significant boost in quality at the cost of instant gratification.
Being able to switch between those sources using physical buttons is definitely going to be handy, but there's a questionable tradeoff.
Because of this, Brady believes water prevents sunburns and carbohydrates cause concussions, but that tradeoff is the foundation of a dynasty.
Negotiating the tough tradeoff between the demands of parenthood and the demands of work is hard enough in its own right.
It's easier for constructors sometimes, and if you have an otherwise lively and high-quality sector, it's sometimes worth the tradeoff.
Advantage can save you money in some instances, but the tradeoff is being tied to a narrower network of healthcare providers.
The tradeoff between time and taste looms large for McDonald's Corp as it works to win back business lost to rivals.
In Canada, the government caps prices at very low levels, but there's a tradeoff: they don't always see medical innovation quickly.
"The tradeoff is that to cover more than a small area of skin, multiple treatments are needed per session," he says.
Corning, the display glass market leader, is still working to find the optimal tradeoff between beauty and function for foldable glass.
When you try to push that to 91 percent, you have this tradeoff between the battery life we want and safety.
"The tradeoff here is we know that doing this could expose people to incredible vulnerabilities," Cook told ABC News this week.
The argument for net neutrality is that the limitations put on internet providers are worth the tradeoff for keeping the internet open.
Shoppers there might mourn the decline in inventory, but it is a tradeoff most travellers will be more than willing to take.
In the case of the GX, the most notable tradeoff is in how power is supplied to the pedals from a standstill.
Even if a medication helps arthritis, the tradeoff may not matter if the patient feels tired or can't think clearly, she said.
If a wobbly cartridge is all I need to give up for nearly $300 in savings, it seems like a fair tradeoff.
The format, which could only display low-resolution graphics, was much more limited than LaserDisc, but it was probably a fair tradeoff.
It's not a full AR experience that sets digital things on real objects, but the tradeoff is glasses that look halfway normal.
Hacking is a tradeoff – every vulnerability the government uses for intelligence or law enforcement is one other hackers could find and use.
But since the files are so much smaller and there's no real loss in image quality, Google says it's worth the tradeoff.
This policy favors U.S. steel mills at the expense of downstream manufacturers, which might seem at first to be a reasonable tradeoff.
Google can be "pure" and just ignore the largest internet market in the world, but that seems like a seriously naive tradeoff.
In the short term, that may mean fewer ZEV sales as a tradeoff for developing higher-quality vehicles with longer driving ranges.
"I think we should think hard about the tradeoff we want to make between security and other things like privacy," says Greene.
However, the tradeoff might be worth it since "cancel for any reason" reimburses travelers up to 75 percent of their trip cost.
It's no surprise the old DMCA tradeoff has broken down in this environment – it simply wasn't on anyone's radar back in 1998.
But the tradeoff is that more users will actually know those features exist in the first place — which often didn't happen before.
"It's going to depend what the tradeoff looks like what kind of border security they're talking about," one member of Hispanic caucus said.
The display is wider than the G235's, but the tradeoff is that the phone won't be quite as comfortable in one hand.
Why it matters: That kind of tradeoff would be sure to complicate negotiations with Democrats, whose support Trump wants for an infrastructure plan.
But it's also arguable that an 8 percent drop in speed just isn't worth the tradeoff when the problem is already partially mitigated.
The tradeoff here is between the quality of the final recorded image and the range at which you can effectively pilot the drone.
These new devices are still not perfect on the lap, but that seems to be a tradeoff that manufacturers still haven't fully nailed.
But the tradeoff is that even a high-end laptop is going to struggle to compete with the specifications of reasonable desktop computer.
He suggested the White House might seek a tradeoff, such as extending electric car credits in return for nixing wind and solar incentives.
The biggest tradeoff for basic economy ticket holders is that they won't get a seat assignment until they check in to their flight.
"There is always a tradeoff," Upendra Tripathy, secretary at the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, told Reuters of the renewable energy auctions.
The ball part of this vacuum increases stability and control, though the tradeoff is that the vacuum is slightly heavier than other models.
A tradeoff of slightly higher tax rates than 2628 percent for corporations is better than excluding so many businesses or delaying tax cuts.
With security, there is always a tradeoff with efficiency and convenience; it's up to you what sort of balance you want to strike.
Traditionally, minimally invasive instruments come with a tradeoff: If you're working at a hospital with a small budget, you're likely using manual instruments.
To reach a top speed of about 200 miles per hour, the cars must find the best tradeoff between aerodynamic downforce and drag.
But perhaps that is a tradeoff that is essential to ensuring that Earth remains simply the cradle of humanity, and not its grave.
Paid leave should be accessible to all families, and it should not require a tradeoff that penalizes workers — especially working women of color.
The haptic buttons does mean the phone is more sealed from the elements like water and dust, but it's just not a worthwhile tradeoff.
A company called Metroboard sells a board with a 40 mile range — the tradeoff being that the battery, and therefore the board, is massive.
This would be rough on users who lose the keys to the account, but Apple may, given recent tensions, judge it worth the tradeoff.
It's the same tradeoff we've seen with plenty of other gaming machines — if you cut down on pixels to push, you'll get better performance.
"If there was a prospect of a tradeoff I think China would consider it," Fitzpatrick said, referring to introducing THAAD as a bargaining chip.
All policy choices involve winners and losers, but the tradeoff is almost never the kind of strict country versus country battle that Bannonism implies.
If the phones are exploding and generally disappointing and you're an annoyance to your friends with Apple Messages, is it even worth the tradeoff?
As Oath told the WSJ today, email can be an expensive system, and Yahoo's tradeoff is all that space in exchange for your data.
The question is whether you would want to suffer the tradeoff of having an inferior main camera just to snap the occasional jaw-dropper.
The tradeoff in image quality and speed is minimal, especially when it means our arms aren't aching at the end of the day.[Sony]
But there's another tradeoff to consider, an environmental factor that even nature lovers tend to overlook: In a landfill, down feathers biodegrade relatively quickly.
As the researchers acknowledge in their paper, at first glance slot-based control systems seem to involve the same tradeoff as conventional traffic lights.
One source said the RFA was told the executive order would include incentives for ethanol and biodiesel in a tradeoff for the blending shift.
There is tradeoff with these two mediums between immersion and isolation, between losing yourself in a fantasy and the alienating experience in a headset.
But we didn't go too much in that direction because there was a tradeoff between performance and the capacity to do an offshore race.
However, the most recent "Mark VI" model of the Skinsuit dialed the pressure back to 20%, which provided a better tradeoff for astronaut wellbeing.
But many millennial women, she said, view motherhood "as the best part of their life," she said, rather than as a tradeoff with career.
But as someone who prefers a more natural look when I wear makeup and less acne overall, I&aposm definitely happy with this tradeoff.  
People who jump at a low monthly premium may not understand the tradeoff they're making, and they may end up burdened with medical debt.
"One problem is in order to get that tradeoff between privacy and accuracy, for a lot of applications it doesn't make sense," Cyphers says.
For many years, Lisa Sigal's paintings have ruminated on buildings and their discontents: the dodgy promise of stability, the tradeoff between security and confinement.
The tradeoff isn't worth it for many, given that Facebook is so tightly integrated into users' lives that leaving the site is a difficult decision.
However, Haas' data from the last few years though shows that the tradeoff between quality of care and cost often doesn't have to be made.
But given how much Facebook earns from our data, making it jump through some hoops to give users more agency seems like a reasonable tradeoff.
When it comes to limiting screen time, there's a tradeoff between parental health, and the needs of a child—and that needs to be acknowledged.
Having a friend who is on vacation here has definitely increased my spending and disrupted my schedule this week, but the tradeoff is worth it.
What they're saying: Google, like Facebook, argues that there's a reasonable and valuable tradeoff between the data users provide and the free services they get.
Just be aware that their flight networks aren't nearly as robust as the bigger carriers, and that the tradeoff for cheap fares is high fees.
The next iPad will also include thinner bezels, according to the report, which notes that these outward upgrades will come with one tradeoff: increased thickness.
However, you may reevaluate the tradeoff of ease for security when some nefarious character snaps your photo and then has his way with your data.
Sharing your photos or other info with an app always comes with a privacy tradeoff, especially when it's from a company you're not familiar with.
The tradeoff for the speed of the scans is quality — it's slightly lower than what you might expect to get from a traditional flatbed scanner.
Environmentalists said there was a tradeoff in managing the river between interests like flood control and better conditions for fish, but argue they can coexist.
If the bill fails because Republicans do not feel comfortable voting for this tradeoff, the CBO analysis will be a big part of the reason.
The fact that Mueller has decided to make this tradeoff means he has concluded that making it clear that exposing Russia's actions is a priority.
Poorer people accused the council of calling off Day Zero as a tradeoff to keep stringent restrictions in place and the cost of water high.
Apple CEO Tim Cook said that the widely-held notion that people need to give up their privacy for better technology is a 'false tradeoff.
That cap caused some in Iowa to question whether the convenience of caucusing virtually would be worth the tradeoff if their votes were worth less.
What was sold last Friday as a kind of tradeoff can happen only when both sides of a political fight possess some power or leverage.
Bill sponsors say it's a necessary tradeoff in exchange for allowing more agricultural visas, because they want to ensure that employers only hire legal workers.
Likely a political tradeoff for repealing the 85033-year ban on oil exports, the subsidies for wind and solar mask what the engineers have revealed.
And this means that there is no uniquely determined correct level of deficit spending; it's a choice that depends on how you value the tradeoff.
The result was a more intricate design than her NES counterpart, but the tradeoff was that her larger size made Metroid II's screens feel cramped.
The pod would need wheels for that eventuality, as well as for low-speed maneuvering in and out of hyper-stations, but that's a minor tradeoff.
That may seem like a fair tradeoff, but its dimensions are roughly the same as the Galaxy S7 Edge, which has a larger 5.5-inch screen.
As spending time in a car becomes less onerous, the tradeoff of moving a few hours away to save money on rent will look increasingly favorable.
The decrease in battery capacity comes with a drop in the device's thickness, but that's the exact tradeoff people praised the original Z Play for avoiding.
It's a fair frustration, but the tradeoff is Persona 5 being an ideal entry point to anyone new to its peculiarities but intrigued by its promise.
It does get occasionally tedious to type on the keypad every time you unlock the door, but the tradeoff is that the door is always locked.
One is whether foregoing ownership of individual titles in exchange for access to a streaming platform that can set its own terms is worth the tradeoff.
They don't make you stop playing music at 2am, but they don't have the best sound system because it's not a real club, that's the tradeoff.
Like Apple, app developers are setting out to protect consumer privacy, but the tradeoff with greater protection is that it makes law enforcement's job more challenging.
The dour nature of the proceedings thus blunts the fun, with the tradeoff being that it offers Jackman an especially full-bodied role in the bargain.
If you have a lot of devices that work with a 25mm headphone jack (and who doesn't?), you're going to have an annoying tradeoff to consider.
The entire process has been costly and time-consuming, leaving many to wonder if it the tradeoff was worth the marginal security enhancements that were made.
But significantly lowering the rate on partnerships and other small or family-run businesses (aka, a lot of hedge fund managers) could be a profitable tradeoff.
His team may have found a solution, but there's usually a tradeoff between the monthly premiums you pay and the deductibles you pay out of pocket.
Walt Orenstein, a professor of medicine at Emory and the former director of the US National Immunization Program, said the tradeoff is a difficult balancing act.
This is what I've called the neo-paleo-Keynesian Phillips curve, in which there is a tradeoff between inflation and unemployment, even in the long run.
Like the organizers at Seneca Falls, as Steinem opened up the world for women and met incalculable resistance, she knew that every action was a tradeoff.
If Johnson follows through on that promise, things could get messy — and the tradeoff could be the degree of access the UK has to EU market.
While some pro-choice politicians claim to be comfortable with this type of tradeoff, it is not something that a genuine pro-life progressive can accept.
This would be a poor tradeoff - it would most likely result in Japan deciding to build its own nuclear deterrent, and undercut U.S. security guarantees worldwide.
Though the GMT will have resolution better than the Hubble Space Telescope, there's a tradeoff between being on the ground and being outside of the Earth's atmosphere.
That always comes in the form of a knowledge tradeoff, and what you learned last game doesn't necessarily translate to a new game and a new deck.
For me, the tradeoff in noise cancellation is worth it to not have to lug around big headphones, but I know this won't be true for everyone.
Plus, you'd need to convince a raw milk drinker that the tradeoff—safer milk that's a little chemically different but still technically "raw"— is worth switching to.
That's the cruel reality of professional sports, the tradeoff for getting to play out your childhood dreams for an audience of millions and an extremely comfortable living.
"In the tradeoff between letting go of some sovereignty and building a state-of-the-art telecommunications network, most African countries have chosen the latter," he said.
That means, yes, someone could try to pick the lock, but it's generally considered a necessary tradeoff for the ability to open a door no matter what.
And it's important to know when those points occur because it would be a regret if you didn't know you were making that tradeoff and it happened.
Happily for Egnyte and other firms that are not growing above 50 percent, there is a rule of thumb that balances the tradeoff between growth and profits.
Even though it may be easier for some consumers to get loans, that comes with the tradeoff of a weakened financial regulatory system and fewer consumer protections.
At the very least, if we do decide to make that tradeoff, citizens should be aware of what they stand to gain, and what they might lose.
But that tradeoff is worth it to some customers who would rather pay up to avoid the crowds shopping in one of the warehouse clubs' physical stores.
But part of the tradeoff that comes with being a responsible adult is recognizing that sacrificing some self-indulgent fun can open the door to more joy.
Of course, the tradeoff for owning all this rare shit was flying across the country—or around the world—to get those one-of-a-kind things.
Like most things in life, the solution required a tradeoff and what was lost in stability was made up for with quick turns and generally improved maneuverability.
Such arguments "seem to assume an alternate universe where there is no downside or tradeoff" — where, in other words, continuing to ignore sexual harassment causes no problems.
As for the new matte black aluminum case—it's definitely not as prone to grody residue as the platinum finish, the tradeoff being that it shows fingerprints easily.
I've been using the Pixel 2 for the past five days and find that, since I already rely on Google's suite of apps, the tradeoff is worth it.
The outlet will have a point of view in its coverage of state and local political issues, meaning it's not a one-for-one tradeoff with traditional newspapers.
He added the bank continues to examine the older portfolio's risk-return tradeoff and sells assets when the opportunity arises, factors "that could have some impact" on growth.
That said, the tradeoff is that Plated recipes tend to be a bit more interesting, and the results are more unique than those of Blue Apron's meal kits.
The FDA won't tolerate a whole generation of young people becoming addicted to nicotine as a tradeoff for enabling adults to have unfettered access to these same products.
Stephen Legomsky, who was chief counsel at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services in the Obama administration, called the plan a "horrendous tradeoff" and predicted Democrats would reject it.
Remember, this service will make it much harder to get into your account if you lose your security key, so make sure the tradeoff is right for you.
The tradeoff for Bowie was that he would be given a big chunk of cash immediately as opposed to the slower income from royalties over the next decade.
Internally, it's running on an unimpressive Atom x5 processor, but this is the tradeoff that Lenovo has chosen, valuing real-world, tactile appeal more highly than synthetic performance.
Even if you take people at their word about being turned off by stars wading into politics, these celebrities are both passionate and prepared to risk that tradeoff.
"There's no tradeoff between universal health care and not ending employer-sponsored coverage," Neera Tanden, the president of the liberal Center for American Progress tweeted over the weekend.
The follow-up thought is that the convenience of not having to check out is perhaps not worth the tradeoff for the surveillance that's happening inside these stores.
But there is an asterisk: Sometimes it's okay to have less than what you want if there is a good tradeoff and you have done a cost-benefit analysis.
But many users would take that tradeoff for a phone they could be confident would last over a long day, or even more — without a giant battery case bulge.
"If I were in their shoes, I would probably decline to include them, to send a message, but this is just my personal view on the tradeoff," he said.
A cutout for a notch in the middle of the top is a tradeoff I'd make for more screen in the same size phone any day of the week.
Ads in an educational app are always a difficult tradeoff between monetization and user experience because they are, by default, designed to take the user out of the app.
The tradeoff was a near-40Mbps drop in download speed, while upload speeds were down a negligible amount in one test and down around 17 Mbps in another test.
In this week's MashTalk podcast, the Mashable team unpacks what Amazon Key means for the company and tech in general, and answers the question: Is it worth the tradeoff?
But that pepperoni-topped tradeoff is what four Salt Lake City parking enforcement officers allegedly pulled off for two years—and it's also allegedly why they've all been fired.
My eyes accepted the tradeoff between seeing in color and being blinded, and seeing in black and white and feeling at ease while staring at a screen for hours.
That's not a bad tradeoff for Twitter users getting to watch the game for free, but it does undermine the premise of Twitter as the home of live events.
Whether it be passing immigration reform, improving health care, or confirming federal judges, voters are ready for Congress to work and will not accept impeachment as a policy tradeoff.
While immigration reform has been framed by Democrats as a tradeoff between a popular initiative for the Dreamers and an unpopular wall, this is a misreading of public opinion.
For the three founding partners who own most of the firm, it might be an acceptable tradeoff, but much less so for the other 12 employee shareholders at BFS.
An economic theory known as the Phillips curve suggests a tradeoff exists between inflation and unemployment, though the Fed has admitted such a relationship is not in the data.
Compared with its rivals, Verizon's 5G network only uses mmWave spectrum, which provides the fastest wireless connection speeds but the tradeoff of these speeds is more limited coverage areas.
Of course, there's a tradeoff: High-quality clothing lasts longer than cheaper threads and is unlikely to need replacement before it's outgrown, and vice-versa for lower-quality garb.
There was a distinct age skew to his appeal, in other words, but there was no sharp tradeoff where to win younger voters he had to alienate older ones.
But it&aposs free of silicones that make me break out so I&aposm not spending extra money on acne treatments; the tradeoff here is worth the price tag.
But locking those power settings may be a healthy tradeoff to prevent an insidious attack that uses those same voltage switches to seduce your processor into spilling its secrets.
"The questions in this release involve a fundamental tradeoff: the costs families suffer when investors are victims of fraud versus the benefits of broader access to capital," Jackson said.
This has always felt like a reasonable tradeoff for the convenience of jamming a little module into my skull and enjoying some easy listening classics like "Sailing" by Christopher Cross.
There's also no tradeoff on security for the soldiers, according to Swiss Guard spokesman Sergeant Urs Breitenmoser, because they're used for ceremonial purposes such as papal masses and state visits.
"The price point being a bit higher is something that given the technology, the quality of the experience, and so on, we really felt was worth the tradeoff," says Bavor.
The tradeoff is a good one: The LG G6 is a surprisingly solid and simple phone that somehow manages to be the most interesting flagship you can buy right now.
But for your commute to work that's a minor tradeoff if it means never having to hunt down a parking spot, or a safe place to lock up your bike.
Putting our produce in the fridge may prolong freshness and inhibit decomposition, but for at least one fruit (yes, tomatoes are a fruit), there's an important tradeoff to consider: taste.
"We don't do end-to-end encryption right now; there's a tradeoff between convenience and security there, and we're evaluating that," the app's product manager told me at the time.
"But if we encourage women to try to attain those work hours, we're basically confronting women with a tradeoff between their health and gender equality," Professor Lyndall Strazdins told Broadly.
The apps are a reasonable tradeoff; storage might be a bigger issue for you, but it can be expanded by a Micro SD card if you wind up needing more.
This small tradeoff is made necessary because of a type of tracking, known as browser fingerprinting, that uses a computer's unique hardware and software settings to essentially fingerprint unique devices.
A P1, this certainly isn't — but considering that you could almost justify driving a car like the 570GT every single day, the tradeoff in performance might all be worth it.
As you might expect, there is a tradeoff at play regarding Egnyte's profitability: The firm isn't growing as quickly as some other enterprise-facing startups that have recently gone public.
The amended bill allowed states to curtail some of those protections, with the tradeoff of additional funding that states could use to help insure people who are expensive to cover.
He enjoys having the ability to board a flight last and not worry about finding a spot for his luggage — and says a few wrinkled shirts are worth the tradeoff.
The tradeoff they face is that they now own the ACA in the eyes of the public, including the problem of rising premiums which they will have helped to create.
It's a tradeoff: A small mouse means more space to move around the mouse pad, which is good, because space is limited in a surface that sits on my lap.
The stage is set with "Equality and Efficiency: The Big Tradeoff," by Arthur M. Okun, the economist from the Brookings Institution who was an adviser to President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Picking up a greater Senate majority is much more valuable to any political party, especially if the only tradeoff is losing two seats out of 435 total in the House.
But the tradeoff is that investors bankrolling these rounds are taking less ownership, likely due to the number of other investors involved by the time a company reaches this milestone.
It also introduced the convenience / surveillance tradeoff: your phone could do wondrous things, if only you'd agree to an interminably long sheet of terms and conditions (and enable location services).
A higher deductible is the tradeoff Republicans made when they decided that lowering premiums would be a top priority for their legislation; plans with lower premiums generally have higher deductibles.
"I prefer the word 'harmony' to the word 'balance' because balance tends to imply a strict tradeoff," Bezos said in an April 2018 interview with Axel Springer CEO Mathias Dopfner.
It's simply to say that while left-wing economics alone clearly doesn't come close to guaranteeing electoral victory there's little reason to believe that any kind of sharp tradeoff exists.
There's always a tradeoff when you decide to choose a pair of wireless headphones, and it's all the more important to pay attention to that when looking for true wireless earbuds.
For now, it sounds like the open platform could mean a thinner margin than PayPal's core product, with the tradeoff being a much bigger funnel of purchases to improve the returns.
World Special Report The global warming tradeoff of Brazil's agriculture boom: Over the past decade, an area the size of South Korea has been cleared in the Cerrado, Brazil's vital savanna.
It's no longer fanless, but overall, it offers 2.5 times more performance than the previous generation (according to Dell), so a little bit of fan noise might be a worthwhile tradeoff.
"Innovations in our portfolio's core brands led to sales growth in Brazil's the North and Northeast in Q2 and we started seeing a tradeoff movement from value to core," he said.
"Innovations in our portfolio's core brands led to sales growth in Brazil's the North and Northeast in Q63 and we started seeing a tradeoff movement from value to core," he said.
Making them smart brings with it the same tradeoff as in the other smart devices in our lives: data collection can dramatically improve consumer experiences, but at the expense of privacy.
And so, while yes, you generally don't get health insurance, having that kind of attention and fun is worth the tradeoff of being young, drunk, and on top of the world.
So you've got three options for using headphones with the latest Moto: The Moto Z is remarkably thin (at least when no MotoMods are attached), but is it worth the tradeoff?
For interaction with humans, passive compliance is a robotics tradeoff: You're not pre-loading a spring and then unleashing it, so it's relatively safer for hanging out with us flesh-suits.
On the federal level, those costs would probably be far higher, and the tradeoff might not be worth it if such a small percentage of the population capitalized on the program.
The depressed valuation reflects a combination of industrywide headwinds and concerns around the health of the legacy businesses, but we believe the risk/reward tradeoff is attractive for long-term investors.
This is the tradeoff most of us accept in caffeine: It can jolt us up and offer somereal long-term health benefits, possibly even mitigating the side effects of chronic stress.
"I don't see that the safety tradeoff is worth the benefit you may possibly get," Dr. Ed Bednarczyk, department chair of the Department of Pharmacy Practice at University at Buffalo, tells PEOPLE.
You might think the tradeoff is ultimately between the regular MacBook and the Pro — the Air is thin, but as the cheapest offering, it's no doubt less powerful than the others, right?
I pressed Fishman on whether partial expansion might nevertheless be a worthwhile tradeoff, given the millions of people currently left without coverage because their state has refused to take the full expansion.
"This is why you want to be careful to evaluate the risk of untrusted code for each Windows Server instance and balance the security versus performance tradeoff for your environment," says Myerson.
Here's the tradeoff: If you sit on the sidelines, you lower your lifetime earnings, reduce the amount you can save in your 401(k) plan and pause your contributions to Social Security.
The financial impact of burning fossil fuels themselves, though "often not accounted for in tradeoff analyses," needs to be taken into consideration on an infrastructure project such as this one, Salomon said.
It's sized 'like a beer can' Unfortunately, though, the smaller size comes with one tradeoff; unlike the current Echo, the tiny version won't always be listening for your "Alexa" commands and questions.
This is the tradeoff most of us accept in caffeine: It can jolt us up and offer some real long-term health benefits, possibly even mitigating the side effects of chronic stress.
But the tradeoff for that security is point-of-sale terminals that are slow and usually have annoying beeps — assuming they work at all and aren't covered in "No Chip!" duct tape.
Comcast's comments are putting a new spotlight on the plans amid concerns that low-income consumers may be forced to make a tradeoff between affordable — and vital — broadband access and their privacy.
"This is why you want to be careful to evaluate the risk of untrusted code for each Windows Server instance, and balance the security versus performance tradeoff for your environment," he wrote.
Her reputation fosters considerable access to her subjects, the tradeoff being that these films heap praise upon them, which might be deserved but can still feel a little squishy around the edges.
And so, like a strand of very stoned DNA, Curren$y and Wayne finally come together to muse more on the grand weed questions with an absolutely incredible tradeoff at the end.
The big tradeoff here is that the F-35 can't be both stealthy and carry tons of missiles, bombs, and extra fuel the way that older aircraft can: hanging from the wings.
KPTI better protects that sensitive kernel memory, but because of the aforementioned tradeoff, people were worried that this solution would cause a noticeable slowdown, particularly for huge cloud providers like Google and Amazon.
While this research doesn't spell the end of fingerprint ID systems, the researchers said it will require the designers of these systems to rethink the tradeoff between convenience and security in the future.
Surveys also suggest that people who have been uninsured or buy their own coverage may be more willing to accept a tradeoff between provider choice and costs than workers in the group market.
But the tradeoff was that insurance had become unaffordable or undesirable for the younger and healthier people asked to pay higher rates and for people who didn't receive the law's generous financial aid.
But security is always some sort of tradeoff, and with WhatsApp, its reliability and mainstream popularity is why many members of the general public may have picked it up in the first place.
Still, there are some people who have abused culling to get away with brutal and illegal hunting sprees, and you'd be hard-pressed to find a scientist who thinks that's an acceptable tradeoff.
It's a totally understandable tradeoff for having the benefit of GPS and cellular connectivity built right into the device — GPS is a notoriously difficult feature to integrate into wearable gadgets of any kind.
During the 1970s almost the whole macroeconomics profession was persuaded by the experience of stagflation that Milton Friedman (and Edmund Phelps) were right: there is no long run tradeoff between inflation and unemployment.
"The FDA won't tolerate a whole generation of young people becoming addicted to nicotine as a tradeoff for enabling adults to have unfettered access to these same products," Gottlieb said in a statement.
Blue Apron, on the other hand, sometimes requires just a bit more prep work or expertise — as a tradeoff, however, you may find Blue Apron&aposs meals a bit more complex and interesting.
Dr. Raymond Tanter wrote an article on June 28500, 6900, that posed the basic tradeoff of the JCPOA: In exchange for Tehran agreeing to limit its nuclear capabilities, economic sanctions would be lifted.
Between the lines: Industry opposes anything that would hurt its bottom line, but of those three proposals, the Senate's "is a positive tradeoff," analyst Ronny Gal of AllianceBernstein wrote to investors this week.
Because the U.S. accounts for the plurality of global pharmaceutical revenues — in 2016 the U.S. comprised 42 percent of global pharmaceutical revenues — it faces an "innovation-access" tradeoff that other countries do not.
Davis says the long-term potential for lacking variety is "an acceptable tradeoff for the positive benefits of standardization" in the studio's view, and sticking with the rounded rectangle is the mandate going forward.
When it comes to the eternal tradeoff between digital security and convenience, most tech firms focus their efforts on the vast majority of people who choose a painless user experience over a paranoid one.
For sports-loving cord cutters, the tradeoff of paying lower cable bills was that they couldn't always watch the big game without going out to a bar or buying an over-the-air antenna.
That means that Dell has had to add fans for this model, but it should be a worthwhile tradeoff: the company promises the new chips will offer two and a half times better performance.
While studios increasingly rely on fan loyalty for all sorts of franchises -- a phenomenon "Trek" and its audience sparked -- the tradeoff is that they are also made keenly aware when something elicits their wrath.
HTC says the company was able to bring the headphone jack back as the larger 6-inch display meant there was more space for it and it didn't need to make a design tradeoff.
Every medical diagnostic test usually has to make a tradeoff between how sensitive it is (how many positives does it identify correctly) versus how specific it is (how many negatives does it identify correctly).
And then there is the seamless transfer of personas that marks Tribe's instinctive travels, the tradeoff of bars, the suspension of the rules of beginnings and endings, where one voice leads into the next.
As detailed in the paper, the problem with traffic lights is they involve a tradeoff in vehicle throughput at the intersection and the amount of time vehicles will spend waiting at a red light.
American firms had access to an IP regime that evolved and changed as needed to support the industry, ensuring a good tradeoff between rewarding inventors with a temporary monopoly and encouraging diffusion of inventions.
That may seem like an inconvenience, but Tesla is apparently betting it will be worth the tradeoff to ensure that people can get in and out of busy charging stations without unnecessarily long waits.
Fifty-four percent of respondents said the added security was an acceptable tradeoff for some surveillance; 2226 percent said it wasn't; 21 percent said it depends, and the remaining 1 percent refused to answer.
I wish I could tell you if the tradeoff is worth it, but honestly it's going to come down to individual preference and your willingness to deal with the hassles of Bluetooth or dongles.
But in this case where the insurers are making big money by working with the government, is it crazy to force them to take losses elsewhere in their government-related business as a tradeoff?
If you want approximate Surface Pro functionality, a bunch of useful ports and can live with the tradeoff of weight, polish and smart feature choices, it's hard to find a better value that this.
But there is a fundamental three-way tradeoff here between the amount of money that you spend, the number of people that you cover, and the extent to which you rely on market mechanisms.
It is a dangerous tradeoff, however, to discard this broad principle of human freedom because of the circumstance of an Alex Jones or any other speaker with whom loud segments of society might disagree.
The Trump effect  The tradeoff for national Republicans is fairly clear: If Moore wins, he's a reliable vote in a Senate that's split 52-48 -- which could pay off on tax reform and more.
"Video compression involves an inherent tradeoff between picture resolution and motion-handling capability," explains a 1990 thesis, produced by a Naval Postgraduate School student, offering video conferencing recommendations for the Republic of China Navy.
Mark Feinberg, president and CEO of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative, told Stat that while he recognizes the importance of animal trials, the urgency of the current public emergency makes it worth the tradeoff.
Allowing public payers to base coverage on drugs value is one of the best approaches for finessing the tradeoff between having low prices today and preserving incentives to develop new drugs in the future.
By being able to support both 5G and super-fast LTE connections, devices will be able to more seamlessly make that tradeoff between 5G and LTE since the speeds will — hopefully — be more comparable.
"When I entered into this space, I ultimately felt like no matter the decision, no matter the outcome, there was going to be a tradeoff because, quite frankly, we need comprehensive immigration reform," she says.
It's not the thinnest or lightest laptop in this class, weighing in at three pounds, but it does have some rugged features like mild drop resistance and water resistance that work as a nice tradeoff.
Left-wing critics of globalization typically deny that this tradeoff exists, portraying instead what economist Jeff Faux terms a "global class war" in which the poor and middle class all around the world are losers.
Americans have many fewer vacation days than French people, which is a plausible social tradeoff, but you would expect Americans to have higher material living standard than people who get two months off a year.
But the tradeoff for lower costs may be less access to mental health care - a breach of both the ACA and federal laws requiring parity between coverage for mental health and other types of care.
When I asked LG's executives whether there is any tradeoff whatsoever in making a TV this thin, they insisted that it delivers image output on par with and better than last year's top-end models.
Right now, though, there's still a tradeoff with these things: you either go with something lightweight and simple, with a long-lasting battery, or you go for a bright, colorful display and sacrifice battery life.
But recovery means that prices rise and new stuff gets built and you end up with the basic tradeoff where allowing lots of development means extremely rapid change, but preventing new development means spiraling prices.
"If we mobilize the Guard and Reserve medical personnel from their civilian jobs, they are no longer in their civilian jobs and that directly impacts the community where they work — that's the tradeoff," he said.
Avoiding this tradeoff and letting children of double-digit ages gain graduated access to walking, biking, transit, and taxis in a place where those are the normal modes of getting around is a huge advantage.
Trump's budget director Mick Mulvaney on Friday suggested a sort of tradeoff with Democrats: For every dollar of funding for the ObamaCare program, Democrats must agree to a dollar of funding for Trump's border wall.
When designing quantum circuits, there's a tradeoff between the number of qubits interacting in the circuit and the number of operations that can be performed on those qubits, also known as the "depth" of the circuit.
The tradeoff, of course, is that now Facebook knows that user is logging into that app and whatever information they've chosen to share with Facebook can be anonymously paired with that data to serve ads etc.
The main tradeoff is package size: because each app brings its own dependencies, they can't all rely on a single popular library, so you end up with a lot of duplicates hidden away in each package.
As the U.S. market continues to shift towards alternative milks — almond, hemp, coconut, soy and rice — and our meals transition to healthier plant-based diets, the tradeoff is that we risk losing key sources daily protein.
This is the tradeoff: Banning fracking would almost certainly contribute to runaway oil and gas prices that could force a faster shift away from fossil fuels; banning fracking would also immediately increase the use of coal.
Air Lease Corp did not order the CSeries in the past because "the price and the risk was not a good tradeoff," when compared to Boeing's 737 MAX line and Airbus's A320 NEO family, Plueger said.
While Nintendo's spinning the death of the Joy-Cons on the Switch Lite (and the new D-pad on the left side) as a positive tradeoff for a more compact design, I think it's a loss.
But, if the cost is sacrificing any sort of moral high ground when it comes to acceptable behavior in politics (and life), the prospect of holding a single Senate seat seems like a very poor tradeoff.
While he described this as "the right tradeoff" to combat discrimination, he also suggested that "there are and have always been very reasonable and legal non-discriminatory advertising practices" that use age- and gender-based targeting.
An explosion of options from streaming and premium services has offered a greater variety of views into American life -- the tradeoff being that mass-appeal hits, like the broad sitcoms of the past, are increasingly rare.
This new budget shows the tradeoff now lies not in managing competing priorities, but in cutting a deal with enough of an increase to non-defense spending to entice Democrats to sign onto bigger defense numbers.
The CBO report makes clear the tradeoff for more government intervention in the drug market: Cost savings for the government would equal less spending on research and development by drug companies, which will mean fewer new treatments.
It framed the issue, like other courts have, as a tradeoff between, on the one hand, the finality of verdicts and avoiding potential juror harassment, and, on the other, the defendant's constitutional right to a fair trial.
"The addition of a new level of government for citizens to petition for permits and certifications for normal use of Lake Michigan is too much of a tradeoff for the negligible benefit to protecting shipwrecks," Walker said.
To achieve the same minimum spec requirements for PC-grade VR, Oculus is lowering the refresh rate on the Rift S from 90 Hz to 80 Hz, a tradeoff Mitchell says helps them keep the requirements in line.
The choice here is either being that person with a large hunk of plastic tethered to their phone or going this painless route, where the tradeoff is waiting a bit longer for the battery to recharge your device.
Not to banish the devices from our homes, but to be more cognizant of the tradeoff between convenience and privacy at work: There's still a long ways to go before we get AI that won't f*ck up.
As an employer, I know that it's always a dilemma for employers to decide between wages and benefits, and employers balance the tradeoff in different ways depending on a myriad of factors (it's not a straight economic calculation).
Consumer Reports notes that dishwashers use half the water they did 20 years ago, which also means a reduction in energy required to heat that water, though the tradeoff is they take longer to run through a cycle.
Moore now pays a lower monthly premium—about half of what she paid before—but it comes with a tradeoff of higher out-of-pocket costs and less choice for providers that doesn't seem worth it to her.
That may sound like a good tradeoff, but a report released by digital advocacy group the Electronic Frontier Foundation on Monday concluded that the service may include some side effects for video sites that don't participate in the program.
She added that it should be done "on autopilot," and not adjusted in reaction to short-term economic data, and that there may be "some tradeoff" with the Fed's parallel plan to raise rates about three times per year.
Mr. Vice President, you and the President had been very critical in the passing of U.S. companies that have outsourced their production to China too readily or sought to make sales there in a tradeoff for access or information.
Steven R. Weisman, a vice president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, a research organization with a strong free trade bent, recently published "The Great Tradeoff: Confronting Moral Conflicts in the Era of Globalization," which tackles this dilemma.
"The negative associations of Facebook use were comparable to or greater in magnitude than the positive impact of offline interactions, which suggests a possible tradeoff between offline and online relationships," the researchers wrote in the abstract to the paper.
U.S. diplomats involved in the Southern Sudanese referendum told me they had to make an implicit tradeoff: either a pathway for independence for South Sudan, which required Bashir's blessing, or justice in Darfur, which would cause trouble for Bashir.
"The tradeoff that founders are making is that the investor partners are bringing a myriad of skill sets to bear that will ultimately increase the odds of success, from network and strategy to operating advice at scale," she said.
So you&aposd rather have a day of embarrassment before Committee than do time but I think it&aposs always a tradeoff between transparency and justice when Congressional Committees and DOJ are deciding whether or not to grant immunity.
The portability/power tradeoff it has made in the new machines seems to be fine for the mainstream, but that's the one thing that seems to be creating the most problems for the hardcore base, and it's worth addressing.
The G1X Mark II used a 24-120mm lens with a f2.0-2993 aperture, and so it will take some time to see how much of a difference that tradeoff makes when paired with the new image sensor and processor.
And while slightly more than half of Americans consider surveillance cameras at work an acceptable safety tradeoff, only about a quarter find it acceptable for "smart thermostats" in their homes to gather data on their comings and goings, reports Pew.
Following up on its post speculating on the possible causes of the various screen breakages we've seen on review units, iFixit's teardown analysis seems to reveal a fundamental design tradeoff Samsung had to make — one that may have doomed the phone.
It also said that because it collects limited categories of information from its users it had to make a tradeoff between collecting more personal information or keeping it simple and raising the minimum age across the board in the region.
I'm glad I wasn't lugging around a full bag of gear, but something like the Sony RX100, with its increased zoom range and ultra-portability, would have been worth the tradeoff of being stuck with a smaller 1-inch sensor.
Above all, we must be wary not to let our conversations fall into what privacy expert Daniel Solove calls the "all-or-nothing fallacy" -- where the tradeoff between privacy and security is incorrectly framed as a one-or-the-other choice.
This year, dramatically downsizing will force the opposing team to either stash a big on someone like Rodney Hood (not a great tradeoff) or pull all their rim protectors off the floor and let LeBron rampage through the paint at will.
The situation highlights the thorny tradeoff US-based companies face when operating in China: It's a hugely profitable opportunity, but placating the Chinese government can require compromising on fundamental democratic values in ways that provoke backlash elsewhere in the world.
The dams were a tough tradeoff between progress and nature: an arid state that would grow to 40 million would have artificial but beautiful reservoirs—but not white water rapids of a once pristine and scarcely populated 19th-century paradise.
Still, they do offer some conveniences that make the tradeoff worthwhile for many owners (like mixing and blending at the kitchen table instead of the counter, or bringing your blender to work so you can whip up an afternoon smoothie).
It's a pretty big visual downgrade, but then again I used to disable textures altogether to try to get an advantage in Quake III Arena back in the day, so I'm sure the tradeoff will be worth it for some.
The tradeoff, though, is that her presence accentuates the underlying message of self-empowerment and learning to love oneself, in a way that makes the movie feel a bit more like an inordinately lavish after-school special than it otherwise might.
If one bronze plan costs a lot more than another, you know you are not looking at a difference in underlying value, but rather a tradeoff you might choose to make in order to access a specific provider or brand.
"We have to think practically, not just about what our policy preferences are, but what's the tradeoff for policy preferences" given that changing the financing for CHIP could be a "significant disruption" for states with biennial budgets, the aide said.
"It's about the final choices on do we go forward with these very difficult sanctions on the Chinese or do we look to make a tradeoff on a security issue, and Bannon would have been in the first camp," Scissors said.
But this one lays bare the downsides of this tradeoff — how, despite their pledge to empower us, the platforms we live on have done just the opposite and stripped us of the agency to dictate what happens with our most personal information.
And the company seems to have found success in translating its light field tech to the worlds of professional cinema and virtual reality, where issues like size and speed sometimes matter less, especially if the tradeoff is heaps and heaps of volumetric data.
The move bans such issuers from the S&P 500 and many index funds (some just underweight them), but it continues to be viewed as a worthwhile tradeoff by founders who are terrified of being the subject of a Carl Icahn letter.
The P1000's lens only opens up to f/10003 at the long end versus f/6.5 on the P900, but that tradeoff may be worth it for the extra reach — at that focal length, you'll want to use a tripod anyway.
While there's some pleasure to be derived from watching a series exhibit the audacity to spoon out tidbits on its own "Twin Peaks"-like terms, the project's appeal likely depends on one's tolerance for near-incoherence when arresting pictures are the tradeoff.
"I think there is an awareness that at the end of the day the relationship with China is so much more important than anything else, in terms of economics, so they might think of this as something of a tradeoff," Brown said.
So the tradeoff involved with traffic lights can be conceived thus: you can lower delays by making red lights shorter, but this will involve more suboptimal yellow lights, which will lower the overall number of cars that can pass through the intersection.
"I feel the tradeoff was worth it because I have created a body of work that I can use as an example for others and as proof for what I've been preaching that authors do to have a successful book launch," Marquina reflects.
Once a plan with subsidized content is added, our research shows that many consumers might find that switching to that service — even if it's deemed to be of lower quality — makes sense given the tradeoff: less favored content but lower connectivity costs.
Even if the government has to contend with some negative public health effects as a result of legal cannabis, the tradeoff of increased tax revenue and helping roll back some of the effects of the racist war on drugs is undoubtedly worth it.
And the fourth idea is that there is an absolute tradeoff between economic equality and economic efficiency — that if we want more equal slices, then we will have to accept the reality that the pie (and thus each slice) will be smaller.
The tradeoff, environmentalists say, is that while Brazil has slowed destruction of the renowned rainforest from its worst levels, it has put another vital ecological zone at risk: a vast tropical savanna that is home to 5 percent of species on the planet.
And there are legitimate questions about how much we can force drug prices down without unwanted consequences like lowering the amount of money spent on research by companies (of course, pharmaceutical companies are invested in pretending that tradeoff is much higher than it'd actually be).
Some digital cameras — even some made by Olympus — have previously allowed 30 frames per second capture when using electronic shutter, but those modes (usually marketed as "4K Photo") always came with a tradeoff in resolution — you weren't capturing the full readout of the image sensor.
To the Editor: Re "A Bad Tradeoff for the Planet," by Lee Wasserman and David Kaiser (Op-Ed, July 26): One of the best ways to save the planet from climate change is to impose a tax on carbon of at least $40 a ton.
The portal at the center of the base glows every three days giving you the option to select either an arbitrary resource or a new dupe, and the tradeoff between their labor value versus food and oxygen consumption is at the heart of the game.
Democrats themselves barely agreed with congressional Democrats' tradeoff Not quite half of Democrats -- 0053% -- said they think that finding a solution for the roughly 2005,216 undocumented immigrants who came to the United States as children is a higher priority than keeping the government open.
But for concerned drone operators — and especially people using drones in scientific research — here's a quick summary: "Really it's always this tradeoff with how high up and how far away we can be in order to collect the useful information and data that we need," Ditmer says.
This is a massive problem that's been going on for 20 years and is basically the result of a tradeoff of speed and efficiency over security (which you can read all about here, but let's move along for now since this blog is about other stuff).
And as of yet, neither he nor Trump have built up enough good will with Palestinians to convince them this vision offers anything more than a financial tradeoff for their aspirations of achieving a sovereign Palestinian state, something they have made clear they will not accept.
Lesson learned Microsoft has tried this before: The Surface RT, Microsoft's first-ever tablet, shipped in 210 with Windows RT, a version of Windows 210 that promised higher speed and better battery life, with the tradeoff that you could only download apps from the Windows Store.
That season was the first in Hill's career where he used more than 20 percent of his team's possessions, and rather than suffering from the standard usage-efficiency tradeoff, Hill's scoring potency actually ticked up once he got to do more with the ball in his hands.
In that context, animated sequels -- including titles like "Incredibles 2," which can be produced years after their predecessors -- look like a logical business move, the potential tradeoff being that the time, money and effort invested in those projects could potentially come at the expense of fresh ideas.
Tillis requested a meeting with Vice President Pence and Senate Republican colleagues in which they discussed a tradeoff whereby Trump would endorse legislation to reform the National Emergencies Act of 1976 in exchange for Republicans defeating the disapproval resolution, according to GOP sources briefed on the discussion.
Features like this don't hurt, though, and GBVS has a particularly interesting one, allowing players to pull off special moves that would traditionally require a complex joystick motion with a single button press, with the necessary balancing tradeoff being that the move enters a brief cooldown period.
Maybe. Probably. From the mid-1970s until just the other day, the overwhelming view in macroeconomics was that there is no long-run tradeoff between unemployment and inflation, that any attempt to hold unemployment below some level determined by structural factors would lead to ever-accelerating inflation.
If what Qualcomm is showing today is truly state of the art, then it presents an interesting tradeoff for Apple's next flagship phone: offer owners a slow but convenient fingerprint sensor under the display, or give them a fast sensor awkwardly located on the back of the device.
The combination of new blood and a more diverse slate of contenders should lend heat from the media's perspective, with the tradeoff being the equivalent of art-house fare can have the same drag on Emmy ratings that an abundance of similar films historically do at the Oscars.
He missed most of 2015, before returning in August and doing this in his first at-bat, part of a two-month period in which the Mets packed the entirety of their decade's best emotional moments—a tradeoff, at some level, every Mets fan knew would mean subsequent misery.
The basic trade-off at the heart of AHCA is hundreds of billions of dollars in Medicaid cuts for hundreds of billions of dollars in tax cuts for the wealthy; the Congressional Budget Office says this tradeoff will cause millions of people to be kicked off the Medicaid rolls.
In the wake of the 2016 election where fake news factories built viral content and generated serious advertising revenues, social networks like Facebook have had to confront the tradeoff between a maniacal focus on quantitative engagement like page views and time on site and the quality of that engagement.
As health care economist Austin Frakt reviewed back in 2017, recent studies have shown that narrow networks There is ostensibly a benefit to this tradeoff: Plans with narrow networks are cheaper, which means lower premiums (or a smaller government contract, in the case of the Optum-VA deal).
Relatedly, while this program is fairly ambitious, its budgetary cost is relatively modest and could be easily financed under the rubric of taxing the rich, rather than asking voters to accept a European-style tradeoff in which middle-class taxes are higher but social services are dramatically more generous.
This is because the inflation-unemployment tradeoff, known as the Phillips Curve, ceased to be an effective monetary policy framework and because the pains of the Great Recession are still fresh in the minds of board members, including Powell, who has been on the Fed board since 2012.
Since the Delaware Supreme Court approved the use of the poison-pill takeover defense in 1985, the courts have basically blessed the following tradeoff: On the one hand, corporate directors can fight tooth and nail to stop a deal and the courts will give only limited scrutiny to defensive tactics.
The last time an iPad bulked up was when Apple replaced the iPad 2 with the iPad 3; the iPad 3's increased weight and thickness was a tradeoff as a result of the Retina display and a battery nearly twice as large as the iPad 2's to power it.
But as Vox's Kelsey Piper explained at the time, these moral tradeoff questions, while interesting, don't really get to the heart of the safety debate in self-driving cars: [The] entire "self-driving car" setup is mostly just a novel way to bring attention to an old set of questions.
This doesn't bother me as much as I thought it would — it's a lot better than 30Hz, which is the 4K refresh rate that the MacBook was specced for on launch last year, and for my uses the dramatic leap in image quality and convenience is worth the speed tradeoff.
The 120 days gives the Financial Stability Oversight Council time to reflect and determine whether there has been an appropriate tradeoff between the benefits and costs of regulation under the Dodd-Frank Act, or whether a simpler regulatory regime could achieve the same goals sought by the Dodd-Frank Act.
The tradeoff is that the Israelis must engage in their own questionable behavior to convince Charlie to literally play along, with Skarsgard as the conflicted warrior, whose own seductive powers are brought to bear as he seeks to train Charlie to survive the gauntlet of suspicion she's destined to face.
The ethnic and cultural trappings, meanwhile, provide a welcome showcase for Hispanic talent, the tradeoff being that this is another series that explores an ethnic group through the prism of criminality and violence, where the business meetings tend to focus on things like "jacking" a shipment from the wrong cartel.
That new roof opens or closes in about 15 seconds, according to BMW, and to make space for it the company completely ditched the two rear "seats" found on the Coupe and the original i8 — a totally fair tradeoff in my eyes, since they were small enough to cramp even a toddler.
It's too early to tell if I've lost anything from this tradeoff—I'd say about 70% of my time on Instagram is apportioned to my alt account—although I have noticed two natural adjustments in my consumption habits to my main profile: the most obvious being, I spend substantially less time liking photos.
My colleague Ashley Carman said she highly recommends it for iPhone users, so that you don't have to pay for iCloud storage; but she also pointed out that, like all Google products, Google Photos is only free because you're paying Google with your personal data — so you have to be comfortable with the tradeoff.
There's a huge tradeoff here for every appealed content decision, how much do we want to build it into a case, and you need experts to help the parties, versus they each just sort of come before Solomon and say, "This kind of happened," and– or Judge Judy maybe is a more contemporary reference.
That's a three-fold increase from the 214-25mm lens found on the RX22.35 II. The most notable tradeoff Sony made in order to pack in this extra zoom range is that the RX103 III loses the constant f210 aperture found on the RX21 II. Instead, the new camera is equipped with a variable f2500-4 aperture.
"Even as we consider the potential benefits of innovative tobacco products and the role that some such products may play in reducing harm to current adult smokers, the FDA won't tolerate a whole generation of young people becoming addicted to nicotine as a tradeoff for enabling adults to have unfettered access to these same products," Gottlieb said.
Given the overwhelming opposition, the mining company has waged an expensive battle – employing lobbyists, lawyers and PR firms in attempts to convince Americans that an industrial mining complex is a good tradeoff for a world-class hunting and fishing region, not to mention home to generations of Alaska Natives and a $6900 billion annual commercial salmon fishery.
Nonetheless, the European desire to keep us in the JCPOA can be used as a tradeoff to get the Europeans to go along with the following steps: first, to announce that Iran's regional behavior rules out lifting UN sanctions on Iran's conventional weapons programs in 2020 and its missile program in 2023 — something the JCPOA would otherwise permit.
A high-premium, low-deductible plan would be good for someone who is risk-averse, perhaps has a known health concern, and doesn't mind paying more for their premium each month for the tradeoff they get of lower out-of-pocket costs, access to a wider network of providers, and possibly a broader range of services covered.
In a 353 paper advocating for the tax, Hassett wrote: The most likely candidates for a carbon tax tradeoff would be the corporate income tax (the U.S. rate is currently among the highest in the industrialized world) and payroll taxes, the latter of which would lower the cost of employment and help offset the possibly regressive effects of higher energy prices on lower-income households.
"The tradeoff is that this type of program is typically set up as a variable rate that fluctuates based on the movement of the U.S. prime rate — a rate that has risen three-fourths of a percent in the last year and [is] expected to continue this trend for the foreseeable future," said Matt Weaver, vice president of sales at Finance of America Mortgage.
So there is a tradeoff, but at the end of the day, I think, that most people will believe they will be better off when their kids have educational opportunities without out-of-pocket expenses and when they have healthcare as a human right and they have affordable housing, when they have decent retirement security, I think most Americans will understand that is a good deal.
The White House offered Congress a tradeoff: agree to cuts in future family-based immigration and a tightening of asylum law, in exchange for allowing 1.8 million unauthorized immigrants who came to the US as children (including the 690,000 immigrants affected by President Donald Trump's decision to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program) to become legal immigrants and ultimately United States citizens.
Take, for example, this account in ProPublica from a respiratory therapist in Louisiana who describes how quickly and violently even healthy young people succumb to COVID-19: Even if we were to accept that subjecting people to this hell in service of the economy was a worthwhile tradeoff, the problem is that the concept of "economic viability," which is presented as infallible and equal to human life, is entirely arbitrary.
But that tradeoff will likely be worth it for anyone who's spent the last year tiring out their arms shooting with a mirrorless camera on the Ronin S. (They'll still have plenty chance to do that, though, as a full battery should last around 11 hours.) It still might be a little heavy to use as a vlogging rig, but there's no doubt that the SC will be less of a drain to use.
While there's a bit of a tradeoff being made there (I'll admit to sighing over the loss of this lovely image from Hades and Persephone's first meeting: "The smell of the flowers she held in her hand, / The pollen that fell from her fingertips, / And suddenly Hades was only a man, / With the taste of nectar on his lips"), that revision means that the story now feels more organic to the characters.
Photo: Matthias Schrader (AP)The recently launched Huawei Mate 203 and Mate Pro 30 boast a lot of upgraded hardware including extra cameras and edge to edge, bezel-free screens, but they come with a huge tradeoff: Due to the ongoing trade war between the U.S. and China and the associated Commerce Department blacklisting of Huawei on national security grounds, Huawei was forced to switch to Android open source and can't ship them with Google apps and services preinstalled.
Imagery from two fisheye lenses on the bottom of the Surround 360 camera can be combined to remove the pole it stands on Imagery from two fisheye lenses on the bottom of the Surround 360 camera can be combined to remove the pole it stands on This puts what you're looking at in the headset in high definition 8K, but if you swing your head, you'll see a lower resolution image for a second until that angle pops into HD. The lag is noticeable, but it's all a smart tradeoff to provide an extra-sharp albeit limited window into another place.

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