Meaning Resource
What does Resource mean? Here you find 84 meanings of the word Resource. You can also add a definition of Resource yourself

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Anything obtained from the environment to meet the needs of a species.
Source: physicalgeography.net

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A user that performs a service, or the equipment or facility that is required for a service.
Source: msdn.microsoft.com

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Relationships Related Term:  material object Resource Description Framework web page n. ~ 1. An asset available for use. - 2. Computing · A component of a computer system, including processors, memory [..]
Source: www2.archivists.org

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Any enterprise asset that can help the organization achieve its objectives Scope Notes: COBIT 5 perspective
Source: isaca.org

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Input or factor used in production, such as cattle, labor, or land.
Source: beefusa.org (offline)

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a new or reserve supply that can be drawn upon when needed “Economists assume that, under normal conditions, markets will allocate resources efficiently,” he added. — BusinessWeek (Feb 17, 2012)
Source: vocabulary.com

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1610s, "means of supplying a want or deficiency," from French resourse "a source, spring," noun use of fem. past participle of Old French resourdre "to rally, raise again,&quo [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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1975, from resource (n.). Related: Resourced; resourcing.
Source: etymonline.com

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available supply of materials, goods, or services. Resources can be natural or human.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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1. An input to be used in an activity, especially production. 2. A natural resource.
Source: www-personal.umich.edu

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Any personnel, material or equipment required for the performance of an activity. Note: - Time is not a resource. It is the measure of the duration for which a resource is needed or used. Also, money [..]
Source: maxwideman.com

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The labor, capital, land, and entrepreneurship used by society to produce consumer satisfying goods and services. Land provides the basic raw materials--vegetation, animals, minerals, fossil fuels--th [..]
Source: glossary.econguru.com

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available source of wealth; a new or reserve supply that can be drawn upon when needed a source of aid or support that may be drawn upon when needed; "the local library is a valuable reso [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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An on-line information set or an on-line interactive option. An on-line library catalog or the local school lunch menu are examples of information sets. On-line menus or graphical user interfaces, Int [..]
Source: math.utah.edu

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n. That which is restored to, relied upon, or made available for aid or support.
Source: easypacelearning.com

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Anything used or consumed while performing a function. The categories of resources are: time, information, objects (information containers), processors (the ability to use information), and enablers (in the context service oriented networks). Specific examples are: CPU time; terminal connect time; amount of directly-addressable memory; disk space; [..]
Source: atis.org (offline)

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anything that we use for survival in the first place and wealth generation in the second. May be natural, economic or human.
Source: itseducation.asia

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Dictionary of Internet Terms A particular object of information provided on the internet.Can be anything from a picture through to a video or application.
Source: comptechdoc.org (offline)

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Any physical or virtual entity of limited availability that provides a benefit. The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB) 2013 1
Source: biodiversitya-z.org

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Definition A person, asset, material, or capital which can be used to accomplish a goal.
Source: investorwords.com

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(1) Generally, any item that can be used. Devices such as printers and disk drives are resources, as is memory. (2) In many operating systems, including Microsoft Windows and the Macintosh operating s [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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An Internet term, which may be used to refer to a wide variety of things (e.g., a Web page, part of a Web page, computer devices, people, or other entities).
Source: erieri.com

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Anything from nature that can be collected and used for profit. There are renewable and non-renewable resources.
Source: canadiangeographic.com

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See Data resource.
Source: aiche.org

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Material, either object, person, or location, that can be used to provide information.
Source: teach-nology.com

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Computational element that gives access to information about or actuation capabilities on a Physical Entity.
Source: iot-a.eu (offline)

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(L: re-, red- = again, anew; surgere= to rise) 1) the means availabe to fulfil an end, to fulfil a function 2) stock or supply that can be drawn on.
Source: seafriends.org.nz

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Vehicles, gear, materials, etc., etc.  tour operators use to provide tours and activities.
Source: rezdy.com

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A source of information/intellectual capital that can manifest in many formats: electronic, websites, print materials, etc.
Source: knowledge.exlibrisgroup.com

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In Autodesk Infrastructure Map Server, a feature source, drawing source, or application component that is stored in the resource repository and can be reused and shared.
Source: knowledge.autodesk.com

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In the Metadata feature, a resource is a generic term meaning any type of data set for which AutoCAD Map 3D can generate metadata. A resource could be a feature class, an object class, a schema, or a [..]
Source: knowledge.autodesk.com

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See mineral resources and reserves
Source: steelbb.com

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Something of use to a person or group. The definition of "resource" is specific to particular places and times. To see nature
Source: feedyourbrains.com

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Anything that is both naturally occurring and of use to humans.
Source: landmarkunitedstates.com

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A conceptual target of a hypertext reference, a resource is an object with a type, relationships to other resources, associated data, and the methods that operate on it. A resource must have at least one URI, a formatted string that identifies a resource
Source: verizonenterprise.com (offline)

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Files of all types that have been uploaded into CERF. In addition, File Cabinets, Folders, Notebooks, Sections, Pages, Resource Pages, and Entries are also CERF Resources.
Source: cerf-notebook.com

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any material that can be used to satisfy a need. 
Source: alanpedia.com

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An environment, template, or asset.
Source: help.skytap.com (offline)

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Any physical item produced for trade purposes. Australia’s resources include coal, gold, aluminium and oil.
Source: sydneyfinancialplanning.com.au (offline)

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Pursuant to 16 USCS § 839a (19), [Title 16. Conservation; Chapter 12H. Pacific Northwest Electric Power Planning and Conservation] the term resource means--
Source: definitions.uslegal.com

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A data file embedded inside the jar file. If you call getResource, you must now sign the Applet, with a real or self-signed certificate. If you don’t, you Applet will just quietly terminate without an [..]
Source: mindprod.com

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A web object served by all origins within a scope, used by Dyn’s Dynamic Steering to monitor their health and performance.
Source: help.dyn.com

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(n) available source of wealth; a new or reserve supply that can be drawn upon when needed(n) a source of aid or support that may be drawn upon when needed(n) the ability to deal resourcefully with un [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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A commodity that is required by an organism and is potentially in short supply
Source: otlibrary.com

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A generator or other source of energy, such as a load with a Demand Response program.
Source: ppcpdx.org (offline)

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A resource is anything that has identity. Familiar examples include an electronic document, an image, a service (e.g., "today's weather report for Los Angeles"), and a collectio [..]
Source: dublincore.org

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An addressable unit of data that is available for use by an application. Resources include text strings, files, documents, vector drawings, bitmapped images, binary data, data streams, message queues, [..]
Source: developer.com

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An assignable entity required for completing or accessing an offering. Resources can be finite or depletable. A finite resource is a fixed resource with definable limitations, such as an instructor, p [..]
Source: e-chemia.pl

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A Mineral Resource is a concentration or occurrence of natural, solid, inorganic or fossilized organic material in or on the Earth's crust in such form and quantity and of such a grade or quality [..]
Source: mcewenmining.com

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An entity that users can work with in AWS, such as an EC2 instance, a Amazon DynamoDB table, an Amazon S3 bucket, an IAM user, an AWS OpsWorks stack, and so on.
Source: docs.aws.amazon.com

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Any enterprise asset that can help the organization achieve its objectives.
Source: ithandbook.ffiec.gov

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Any item you want to track, from company vehicles to software licenses and access cards. For capital resources, you can capture the acquisition cost and record depreciation based on the depletion sche [..]
Source: workday-irsc.weebly.com

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A discrete reusable unit of training defined in the SCORM manifest. Resources are the reusable chunks of learning that comprise a SCORM course. They can be either SCOs (the most common type of resourc [..]
Source: scorm.com

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n. recurso
Source: trelliscompany.org

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Any ecological or other environmental component affected by an impact.
Source: cieem.net (offline)

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Materials or phenomena which can provide energy directly or via conversion.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Available manpower, facilities, revenue, equipment, and supplies to produce requisite Health care and services.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Natural sources from which Power is obtained.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Energy sources produced from Primary Energy Resources, such as refined fuels or electric Power.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Environmental reservoirs of Water related to natural Water Cycle by which Water is obtained for various purposes. This includes but is not limited to Watersheds, aquifers and springs.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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The calculated amount of material in a mineral deposit, based on limited drill information. Rock
Source: adrianaresources.com (offline)

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A valuable supply of natural materials, i.e. oil, water, coal and trees
Source: waterquest.ca (offline)

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A Mineral Resource is a concentration or occurrence of natural, solid, inorganic or fossilized organic material in or on the Earth's crust in such form and quantity and of such a grade or quality that it has reasonable prospects for economic extraction. The location, quantity, grade, geological characteristics and continuity of a Mineral Resou [..]
Source: mundoro.com (offline)

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The calculated amount of material in a mineral deposit, based on limited drill information. Resuing
Source: mrag.ca (offline)

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An object representing a node in the resource tree of an application. If traversal is used, a resource is an element in the resource tree traversed by the system. When traversal is used, a resource be [..]
Source: docs.pylonsproject.org

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In a computer system, any function, device, or data collection that can be allocated to users or programs.
Source: ise.gov (offline)

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named material or skill required to execute Jobs Spare
Source: bim-level2.org (offline)

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A resource is some object or entity that has a URI where it can be manipulated through HTTP requests.
Source: apiglossary.com

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A piece of knowledge, an understanding about the world, a belief, a behaviour, a skill, a person or an object, which contributes to the achievement of an outcome.
Source: inspiritive.com.au

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any entity that a program acquires and releases. Typical examples are free store, file handles, threads, sockets. See also: resource acquisition is initialization, exception safety, basic guarantee [..]
Source: stroustrup.com

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A "resource" is an individual or groups that can work on tasks.
Source: wiki.servicenow.com

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The term is used to refer to both a Generation Resource and a Load Resource. The term "Resource" used by itself in these Protocols does not include a Non-Modeled Generator or an ERS Resource.
Source: ercot.com (offline)

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The term introduced in 2007 that adds categories for contingent and prospective resources in addition to proven and unproven reserves. Contingent reserves are those that are potentially recoverable, b [..]
Source: petroleum.co.uk

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The total amount of oil or gas estimated to be held within a rock formation beneath the ground. Only a small percentage of a resource may be extractable. The amount that can be extracted is limited by [..]
Source: refine.org.uk

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A means that is available for supplying an economic want. Minerals and fossil fuels are described as stock, resource or reserves.
Source: web.deu.edu.tr

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Description
Source: om4tourism.com (offline)

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resource|lang=en * '''2000''' January 15, Peter Sagal (host), ''Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me!'', National Public Radio *: Support for NPR comes from{{...}}the William T. Grant Foundation, helping the n [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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A resource is a source or supply from which benefit is produced, typically but not necessarily of limited availability. Resource may also refer to: Natural resources, anything obtained from the envir [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In project management, resources are required to carry out the project tasks. These can be people, equipment, facilities, funding, or anything else capable of definition (usually other than labour) re [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In Microsoft Windows, resources are read-only data embedded in portable executable files like .exe, DLL, CPL, SCR, SYS or (beginning with Windows Vista) MUI files.The Windows API provides for easy acc [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In the Java programming language a resource is a piece of data that can be accessed by the code of an application.An application can access its resources through uniform resource locators, like web re [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Resource refers to all the materials available in our environment which are technologically accessible, economically feasible and culturally sustainable and help us to satisfy our needs and wants. Res [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Resource was a German electronic dance production and remix group, consisting of producers Frank Knebel, Henning Reith, Reinhard Raith, and Wolfgang Boss. They released one single in 2003, "(I Just Di [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In biology and ecology, a resource is a substance or object in the environment required by an organism for normal growth, maintenance, and reproduction. Resources can be consumed by one organism and, [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org





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