Provides integrated results with advanced visual analytical interface.
The reviewer may be pointing out that "average weather in Australia by month" is misleading, since Australia is a continent with tropical north (monsoon, wet/dry seasons), desert interior (hot days, cold nights), temperate south (four seasons, cool winters), and Mediterranean southwest. A single "average" for the whole country by month is nearly useless—e.g., "average June" could mean 22°C and dry in Darwin but 12°C and rainy in Melbourne.
Likely complaining that the information was too generalized or incorrect—e.g., "This says average February temp is 29°C, but in Tasmania it was 18°C."
Could be a dry joke: "Great—now I know it's hot in January somewhere down under, thanks."
Depending on where this review was left, here’s what likely makes it notable:
We offer pricing plans that fit all investigation types and team sizes. Compare and find the best plan for you.
The perfect way to test out your analytical needs and later upgrade to what suites you best. average weather in australia by month
A must have tool for all your IPDR investigative needs. Experience next-gen IPDR analytics with C5 CAT Edition. The reviewer may be pointing out that "average
The optimum choice of IOS to let Application work as a client-server in local network or stand-alone as well. desert interior (hot days
The most powerful option for mid and big-size organizations looking to get as much data as possible.
This edition is a bespoke data analytical solution. Designed, developed and tailored to fit your organizations specific needs
Unlimited Big Data, Ultimate Solution
Data with no limits for Big data analysis with state of art data security measures.Enterprise edition of the C5 CDR analyzer consist of a server license and a complimentary copy of the client License. Server License would be installed on the server thereafter client license would be installed on a computer connected to the server through LAN network. This implementation would enable C5 client to connect to the server and access the data on the basis of assigned privileges. Thus maintaining data security would be easy and data is located centrally.
Ultimate solution for Big Data Analysis
Ultimate solution for Big data analysis with state of art data security measures.Enterprise edition of the C5 CDR analyzer consist of a server license and a complimentary copy of the client License. Server License would be installed on the server thereafter client license would be installed on a computer connected to the server through LAN network. .This implementation would enable C5 client to connect to the server and access the data on the basis of assigned privileges. Thus maintaining data security would be easy and data is located centrally.
The C5 CDR Analyzer's Professional Edition is capable of working as a client to the server in local network as well as this edition also can be used as stand-alone; required data from the server can be transferred into this and can be carried anywhere needed for analysis.
A Lite version of the acclaimed C5 CDR ANALYZER made by Prosoft e-Solutions India Pvt. Ltd. The desktop application that is convenient and simple to use, helps you find crucial information expeditiously. Ideal for day to day CDR analysis, it’s designed from the ground up with performance and accuracy being the focus of development. With an intuitive UI and user-friendly operations this application makes it a must have, for anyone with the need and know-how of CDR analytics.
The reviewer may be pointing out that "average weather in Australia by month" is misleading, since Australia is a continent with tropical north (monsoon, wet/dry seasons), desert interior (hot days, cold nights), temperate south (four seasons, cool winters), and Mediterranean southwest. A single "average" for the whole country by month is nearly useless—e.g., "average June" could mean 22°C and dry in Darwin but 12°C and rainy in Melbourne.
Likely complaining that the information was too generalized or incorrect—e.g., "This says average February temp is 29°C, but in Tasmania it was 18°C."
Could be a dry joke: "Great—now I know it's hot in January somewhere down under, thanks."
Depending on where this review was left, here’s what likely makes it notable: