Dynamic

  • (adj): Characterized by action or forcefulness or force of personality.
    Example: "A dynamic market"; "a dynamic speaker"; "the dynamic president of the firm"
    Synonyms: dynamical
    See also — Additional definitions below

Some articles on dynamic:

Dynamic Photo HDR
... Dynamic Photo HDR is a photography software developed by Mediachance for Microsoft Windows, designed to create and tone map high dynamic range photos by combining multiple JPG ...
RTP Audio Video Profile - RTP/AVP Audio and Video Payload Types
... for RTCP conflict avoidance N/A N/A RFC 3551, Page 77 ... - 95 unassigned RFC 3551, Page 32 dynamic H263-1998 video 90000 H.263 video, second version (1998) RFC 3551 ...
David Fisher (architect) - Career - Dynamic Tower
... Fisher is the founder and chairman of Dynamic Architecture Group ... He is the designer of the proposed rotating Dynamic Tower, billed as the world's first building in motion, though the basic concept has numerous precedents ... Fisher's Dynamic Tower was designed by the Dynamic Architecture Group ...
Da Vinci Machine
... extension of the Java Virtual Machine to add support for dynamic languages ... It is already possible to run dynamic languages on top of the JVM, but the goal is to ease new dynamic language implementations and increase their performance ...
Dynamic Enterprise - Dynamic Communications Framework
... The Dynamic Enterprise is enabled by a Dynamic Communications Framework, a concept developed by Alcatel-Lucent, that interconnects networks, people, processes and knowledge ...

More definitions of "dynamic":

  • (adj): Of or relating to dynamics.
  • (adj): Expressing action rather than a state of being; used of verbs (e.g. 'to run') and participial adjectives (e.g. 'running' in 'running water').
    Synonyms: active
  • (noun): An efficient incentive.
    Example: "They hoped it would act as a spiritual dynamic on all churches"
    Synonyms: moral force

Famous quotes containing the word dynamic:

    Magic is the envelopment and coercion of the objective world by the ego; it is a dynamic subjectivism. Religion is the coercion of the ego by gods and spirits who are objectively conceived beings in control of nature and man.
    Richard Chase (b. 1914)

    Knowledge about life is one thing; effective occupation of a place in life, with its dynamic currents passing through your being, is another.
    William James (1842–1910)

    Imagination is always the fabric of social life and the dynamic of history. The influence of real needs and compulsions, of real interests and materials, is indirect because the crowd is never conscious of it.
    Simone Weil (1909–1943)