megadata
Extremely large collections of electronically-stored data.
Noun
- Extremely large collections of electronically-stored data.
- Experience with "megadata," large collections of remote objects presented to users, suggests that users typically view large collections of icons, but open only a few of them for detailed inspection. - 1995, David...
- An entity may also be selected by traversing a tree of increasingly specific names, which solves the "megadata" problem of searching one large dataset instead of many small sets [Sims 1994]. - 2000, Chris Marshall,...
- Rendering and analysis of increasingly precise molecular platforms and bioinformatic tools to manage megadata have galvanized the field of preeclampsia genetics, which promises to revolutionize how we think about the...
- Large collections of personal data that are gathered and maintained by companies for commercial exploitation.
- The multiple agencies (state, non-state and hybrid) engaged in surveillance and the various processes, forms and purposes of surveillance that is brought together through information sharing networks or other means...
- Examples of megadata-systems are Facebook, eBay, Twitter etc. Such systems raise questions regarding privacy, legality, and ethics, but, at the same time, have already been able to readily provide clinicians with...
- In nearly every case, each car and SUV and truck and bus was continuously signaling its position for the benefit of commercial collectors of megadata, police agencies—and whoever owned the future. - 2017, Dean Koontz,...
Origin
From mega- + data.