Being noticeable baked
This is used because the feds seem to be up "high" in power
A good thing to say if you are in an area where you wouldnt like to give away much he information
This is used best in school
This is used because the feds seem to be up "high" in power
A good thing to say if you are in an area where you wouldnt like to give away much he information
This is used best in school
by Jiminy 🅱️ripket March 29, 2017
A term often used alongside other irrelevant buzzwords by non-technical product managers when describing the ideal approach to building an overly-complex solution to a straightforward problem.
Business: we would like to automate sending emails to clients when an operator finishes a task. Can that be done by Q4?
PM: Sure. *looks to software manager* We need to leverage AI to build a federated architecture for storing our large language models in a data lake with blockchain.
SDE: can you share the requirements and business value?
PM: hey guys I gotta run, meeting with the big guns. Let me know when this baby will launch!!!
PM: Sure. *looks to software manager* We need to leverage AI to build a federated architecture for storing our large language models in a data lake with blockchain.
SDE: can you share the requirements and business value?
PM: hey guys I gotta run, meeting with the big guns. Let me know when this baby will launch!!!
by ItsameeDoucheKebab August 16, 2023
by ML88 June 02, 2009
To completed dominate someone in any sport or event, particularily tennis. Originates from Roger Federer ,the current top player in the world and perhaps of all time. To truly "federize" someone you must not only dominate them, but also dominate them with class and style.
Dude, you totally federered that guy with your backhand!
AWWWW man, Walt just federized my ass at Halo. I couldn't walk three steps and my guts were smeared across in the screen in a horrid, yet poetic manner.
AWWWW man, Walt just federized my ass at Halo. I couldn't walk three steps and my guts were smeared across in the screen in a horrid, yet poetic manner.
by ByronGman September 19, 2006
by seattleboxcar May 14, 2016
To completely dominate another player in any sport or game, particularly in tennis. Originates from Roger Federer, the master of Federization
by Etando February 01, 2010
1. Short for Roger Federer, the current top-ranked tennis player worldwide
2. Can also be used to describe how badly somebody got beaten at tennis
2. Can also be used to describe how badly somebody got beaten at tennis
by RHS Student September 01, 2004