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  • Asked on February 10, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on February 10, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on February 9, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on February 9, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on February 9, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on February 8, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on February 7, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on February 6, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on February 3, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes
  • Asked on February 2, 2022 in Meaning.

    In this sense, “scale” is part of the phrasal verb, scale down or scale up.

    To say that something doesn’t scale means that it either doesn’t break under the weight of the full-scale organization, or its function is reduced to the point that it is no longer reliable or productive.

    The model is scaled down and up: how does

    that look? http://www.thefreedictionary.org/dxt/index.html

    com/scale+up:]

    • 22207 views
    • 136 answers
    • 8165 votes