What's the difference between discoverability and findability?

Discoverability


Definition:

  • (n.) The quality of being discoverable.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) There are also problems with gestures such as swiping the screen because they're "inherently vague", and "lack discoverability": there's no way to tell what a gesture will do at any particular point.
  • (2) The company hired by Royal Dutch Shell plc in 2012 to drill on petroleum leases in the Chukchi — Sugarland, Texas-based Noble Drilling US LLC — in December agreed to pay $12.2m after pleading guilty to eight felony environmental and maritime crimes on board the Noble Discoverer.
  • (3) It has been named the Skywalker hoolock gibbon by its discoverers, who are Star Wars fans.
  • (4) Anatomists may take an especial interest in the letters No 1903 to HERDER and No 1904 to CHARLOTTE v. STEIN (both dated the March 27, 1784) which demonstrate the discoverer's mirth in finding out the human os intermaxillare.
  • (5) Politicians like to tell voters that their policies are a rational response to a perfectly discoverable set of facts.
  • (6) One of those funded is Discoverables Ltd, a company limited by shares set up by youth charity Spark+Mettle.
  • (7) The conclusion is that to Wells belongs the singular honor and title of discoverer.
  • (8) Yet for decades we thought it was just a hill made of glacial moraine," says discoverer Nick Card of the Orkney Research Centre for Archaeology .
  • (9) The word "scopolamine" is derived from "Scopolia carniolica", a solanaceous plant so named by Carl von Linné in honour of supposed discoverer, J.
  • (10) During an eclectic address – in which he questioned the audience of vice chancellors on basic science, including the name of the discoverer of sodium – Johnson said: "I looked at the recent figures for foreign students coming to this country, and I do not regard what seemed to me to be a reduction in those numbers as necessarily a positive economic indicator.
  • (11) The oil company was forced to send both ships – the Noble Discoverer and the Kulluk – to Asia for repair , effectively ruling out a return to drilling this calendar year.
  • (12) On Sunday, the birthday celebrations go public, with talks on cosmology by the Astronomer Royal Martin Rees, Nobel laureate Saul Perlmutter, one of the discoverers of dark energy, and long-time Hawking collaborator Kip Thorne.
  • (13) Due to the lowered resistance of the organism, acute pulpitic manifestations without discoverable external cause or exacerbation of chronic periapical processes may occur in the cours of influenza infections.
  • (14) "We think we have a really good relationship with the Journal because they recognise that even with the pay model they felt it was really important to ensure that their content is still discoverable.
  • (15) Whether incident reports are discoverable depends on the purpose of the reports and the laws of the state where the reports are filed.
  • (16) An account is given of teachers and discoverers of venereological importance after von Hebra and Sigmund to Arzt.
  • (17) Thus notions of the newborn as an isolated amoral id, and of the infant as an egocentric discoverer of the object concept, must be rejected.
  • (18) But there was still the problem of discoverability.
  • (19) Two of these patients had no discoverable primary tumour.
  • (20) In the meantime, BP has placed a containment cap on Deepwater Horizon's failed blow-out preventer which takes some of the oil and gas to a drillship, the Discoverer Enterprise .

Findability


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) He kicks straight off with a sentence that simply isn’t true: "A blog I wrote in 2007 will no longer be findable when searching on Google in Europe".
  • (2) Actually, presence of Radon in warm waters is particularly evident in some basins (the Baths of Badgastein in Austria) and is also findable in some italian thermal towns such as Merano Laurisia, Abano, Baths of Lucca or the island of Ischia itself.
  • (3) It is known that the decay products of the U-238 are findable in nature in certain materials (such as tufa, limestone, etc.
  • (4) It is evident that, for example, the residents of Campania or Lazio will be involved, on such conditions and during their whole life, in the action of natural radiations of decay products of Uranium and consequently of Radon, which is originated and, as gas, also findable in the air of those indoor areas, at a concentration inversely proportional to the relevant ventilation factors.

Words possibly related to "discoverability"

Words possibly related to "findability"