Interoperability is a characteristic of a product or system to work with other products or systems.
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Interoperability is a characteristic of a product or system to work with other products or systems.
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Interoperability implies exchanges between a range of products, or similar products from several different vendors, or even between past and future revisions of the same product.
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Interoperability is used by researchers in the context of urban flood risk management.
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Interoperability is an element of coalition willingness to work together over the long term to achieve and maintain shared interests against common threats.
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Interoperability is an important issue for law enforcement, fire fighting, EMS, and other public health and safety departments, because first responders need to be able to communicate during wide-scale emergencies.
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Interoperability can have important economic consequences; for example, research has estimated the cost of inadequate interoperability in the US capital facilities industry to be $15.
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Interoperability tends to be regarded as an issue for experts and its implications for daily living are sometimes underrated.
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Interoperability has surfaced in the software patent debate in the European Parliament.
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Interoperability has become a common challenge within the manufacturing field in recent years particularly due to legacy systems, and the integration of manufacturing processes under the directive of promoting Industry 4.
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Interoperability has become a cornerstone of manufacturing policy and directives alongside autonomy and sustainability which can be identified within the German Federal policy of 2030 Vision for Industrie 4.
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