Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun The ability or possibility of being replicated or reproduced.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • This infrastructure will be set up with the aim of replicability throughout Haiti.

    Jim Luce: Connectivity Is Key To Social Change Jim Luce 2010

  • In a constellation of big stars, Muhammad Yunus shone brightest among social entrepreneurs because he succeeded in his big idea for small people with massive replicability and financial sustainability.

    Tony Meloto: Lessons in Davos: Listen to the Poor, Work With the Young Tony Meloto 2012

  • When you tweet something, that tweet lasts forever (persistence); it can be easily retweeted, tweaked and retweeted, or slapped on a t-shirt (replicability); it can be found with some speedy Googling, and if deleted, scooped up from the darkweb (searchability); and no matter who you think your followers are, that tweet may eventually end up on the interface of an employer, creepy dude, or your born/unborn children (invisible audiences).

    Claire Gordon: A Conversation With Your Cellphone Claire Gordon 2011

  • When you tweet something, that tweet lasts forever (persistence); it can be easily retweeted, tweaked and retweeted, or slapped on a t-shirt (replicability); it can be found with some speedy Googling, and if deleted, scooped up from the darkweb (searchability); and no matter who you think your followers are, that tweet may eventually end up on the interface of an employer, creepy dude, or your born/unborn children (invisible audiences).

    Claire Gordon: A Conversation With Your Cellphone Claire Gordon 2011

  • To define content, he uses metrics devised by Danah Boyd: persistence, replicability, searchability and invisible audiences.

    Claire Gordon: A Conversation With Your Cellphone Claire Gordon 2011

  • To define content, he uses metrics devised by Danah Boyd: persistence, replicability, searchability and invisible audiences.

    Claire Gordon: A Conversation With Your Cellphone Claire Gordon 2011

  • When you tweet something, that tweet lasts forever (persistence); it can be easily retweeted, tweaked and retweeted, or slapped on a t-shirt (replicability); it can be found with some speedy Googling, and if deleted, scooped up from the darkweb (searchability); and no matter who you think your followers are, that tweet may eventually end up on the interface of an employer, creepy dude, or your born/unborn children (invisible audiences).

    Claire Gordon: A Conversation With Your Cellphone Claire Gordon 2011

  • When you tweet something, that tweet lasts forever (persistence); it can be easily retweeted, tweaked and retweeted, or slapped on a t-shirt (replicability); it can be found with some speedy Googling, and if deleted, scooped up from the darkweb (searchability); and no matter who you think your followers are, that tweet may eventually end up on the interface of an employer, creepy dude, or your born/unborn children (invisible audiences).

    Claire Gordon: A Conversation With Your Cellphone Claire Gordon 2011

  • To define content, he uses metrics devised by Danah Boyd: persistence, replicability, searchability and invisible audiences.

    Claire Gordon: A Conversation With Your Cellphone Claire Gordon 2011

  • To define content, he uses metrics devised by Danah Boyd: persistence, replicability, searchability and invisible audiences.

    Claire Gordon: A Conversation With Your Cellphone Claire Gordon 2011

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