The term has been in popular use for little more than a decade, but the ideas it encapsulates have been around for a lifetime.
Artificial general intelligence: Are we close, and does it even make sense to try?|Will Heaven|October 15, 2020|MIT Technology Review
Those figures encapsulate the hit his small business, Samovar Tea, has taken in revenues, employee count, and number of stores open, respectively.
What small-business owners need from the 2020 election|Anne Sraders|September 30, 2020|Fortune
The meaning of trust for Google’s local results was expanded to encapsulate the security and well-being of its searchers through the transactional environment itself.
A new era has arrived in local search: Google’s Local Trust Pack|Justin Sanger|September 18, 2020|Search Engine Land
Altogether, the dataset provided nearly 1,100 hours of EEG recordings from almost 700 patients, which encapsulated more than 3,500 seizure events.
How a Crowdsourcing Challenge Turbocharged Brain Research During Lockdown|Shelly Fan|June 2, 2020|Singularity Hub
The challenge embraced a one-two formula for accelerating scientific progress, most recently encapsulated by research into Covid-19.
How a Crowdsourcing Challenge Turbocharged Brain Research During Lockdown|Shelly Fan|June 2, 2020|Singularity Hub
This week, books that encapsulate the enthusiasm of youth and the battered truth of age, from Danielewski to Daniel Mendelsohn.
This Week’s Hot Reads: Oct. 7, 2012|Nicholas Mancusi|October 7, 2012|DAILY BEAST
This Noah Smith post on poverty in Japan seems to encapsulate it pretty well.
What Does it Mean to Be Poor?|Megan McArdle|September 17, 2012|DAILY BEAST
British Dictionary definitions for encapsulate
encapsulate
incapsulate
/ (ɪnˈkæpsjʊˌleɪt) /
verb
to enclose or be enclosed in or as if in a capsule
(tr)to sum up in a short or concise form; condense; abridge