Panoptic, definition

Panoptic, of course, means all-seeing, which is the opposite of the type of deference other states have adopted.114 And that makes sense: only a meaningful judicial examination of the terms of a transaction—a review that not only compares the costs and benefits, but realistically examines the alleged goals of that transaction, to ensure that they actually benefit the pub- lic—can prevent courts from being distracted by the “surface indicia of public purpose”115 and upholding expenditures that, although “apparently devoted to quasi-public purposes,” are “actually [subsidizing] private business.”116

Examples of Panoptic, in a sentence

  • Panoptic-DeepLab: A Simple, Strong, and Fast Baseline for Bottom-Up Panoptic Segmentation.

  • Panoptic segmentation is common also for LiDAR data, both in form of range images [26] and point clouds [11] [32].

  • Panoptic segmentation [22] unifies semantic and instance segmentation, and solves both jointly.

Related to Panoptic,

  • Fiber means a glass strand or strands which is/are protected by a color coded buffer tube and which is/are used to transmit a communication signal along the glass strand in the form of pulses of light.

  • PNode has the meaning set forth in the CAISO Tariff.

  • Optical means services related to the provision of glasses, contact lenses, tests and treatments carried out by a registered optometrist or ophthalmologist.

  • Ethernet means a family of computer networking technologies for LANs.

  • Sensor means any measurement device that is not part of the vehicle itself but installed to determine parameters other than the concentration of gaseous and particle pollutants and the exhaust mass flow.