Online Google Dictionary

bootstraps 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈbo͞otˌstrap/,
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bootstraps, plural;
  1. Get (oneself or something) into or out of a situation using existing resources
    • - the company is bootstrapping itself out of a marred financial past
  2. Start up (an enterprise), esp. one based on the Internet, with minimal resources
    • - they are bootstrapping their stations themselves, not with lots of dot-com venture capital
Noun
  1. A loop at the back of a boot, used to pull it on

  2. A technique of loading a program into a computer by means of a few initial instructions that enable the introduction of the rest of the program from an input device

  3. The technique of starting with existing resources to create something more complex and effective
    • - we see the creative act as a bootstrap process

  1. (bootstrap) a strap that is looped and sewn to the top of a boot for pulling it on
  2. (bootstrap) help oneself, often through improvised means
  3. (Bootstrap) Bootstrapping or booting refers to a group of metaphors that share a common meaning: a self-sustaining process that proceeds without external help. ...
  4. (Bootstrap (statistics)) In statistics, bootstrapping is a modern, computer-intensive, general purpose approach to statistical inference, falling within a broader class of resampling methods.
  5. (bootstrap) A loop (leather or other material) sewn at the side or top rear of a boot to help in pulling the boot on; A means of advancing oneself or accomplishing something without aid; The process by which the operating system of a computer is loaded into its memory; The process necessary to ...
  6. (BOOTSTRAP) This is ???????????????????????? It can be found on the system info screen of the receiver.
  7. (BOOTSTRAP) Code that allows the receiver to power up and access the programming on the TSOP.
  8. (BOOTSTRAP) military program for attaining educational certification from civilian institutions as preliminary to promotion or career advancement; formally operated under the auspices of United States Armed Forces Institute (USAFI) or Servicemember's Opportunity College (SOC). ...
  9. (Bootstrap (boot)) The process of starting up, usually unaided. Term refers to 'pulling yourself up by your bootstraps'.
  10. (Bootstrap) "To lift oneself in one's bootstraps". The process of using one's resources to gain more, the basis of many Concordat projects. "The barefoot teachers are bootstrapping India, each one is training several others".
  11. (Bootstrap) A process to determine an interest rate or volatility at a particular time by plotting known rates on a graph to create a curve.
  12. (Bootstrap) A random sample is selected by sampling with replacement from the data set and is used to train the network. The trained network is then tested on the remaining data. This procedure is repeated a large number of times. ...
  13. (Bootstrap) A self-sustaining system in liquid rocket engines by which the main propellants are transferred by a turbo-pump which is driven by hot gases. In turn the gas generator is fed by propellants from the pump.
  14. (Bootstrap) A takeover bid for the controlling interest in a company at a certain price followed by a lower offer for the remaining shares.
  15. (Bootstrap) Recalculation of results with randomly rearranged datasets to exclude the possibility of artefacts in data clustering.
  16. (Bootstrap) The practice of using with-replacement empirical distribution of observations to estimate the statistical properties of the population from which the observations were made.
  17. (Bootstrap) This technique was invented by Bradley Efron (1979, 1981, 1982) and further developed by Efron and Tibshirani (1993). "Bootstrap" means that one available sample gives rise to many others by resampling (a concept reminiscent of pulling yourself up by your own bootstrap). ...
  18. (Bootstrap) To do something seemingly impossible using only the available resources. In the context of DC battery power circuits it means generating a DC voltage higher than the battery voltage.
  19. (Bootstrap) To load and initialize the operating system on a computer.  Often abbreviated to boot.
  20. (bootstrap) A statistical method for measuring consistency in datasets in which new simulated datasets are generated by sampling with replacement. ...
  21. (bootstrap) A technique or device designed to bring itself into a desired state by means of its own action. The term is used to describe the process by which a device such as a PC goes from its initial power-on condition to a running condition without human intervention.
  22. (bootstrap) An idea for statistical inference, using training sets created by re-sampling with replacement from the original training set, so examples may occur more than once.
  23. (bootstrap) v. start up (an Internet-based business or other enterprise) with minimal financial resources.