It totally depends on what business you are running, such as a builder would want a labor intensive business, whilst a car maker would want a capital intensive business, disserent businesses need different things.
In the physical sciences, an intensive property (also called a bulk property, intensive quantity, or intensive variable), is a physical property of a system that does not depend on the system size or the amount of material in the system: it is scale invariant. Distance is an intensive property.
What would you do. Could you upgrade?
An intensive property (also called a bulk property), is a physical property of a system that does not depend on the system size or the amount of material in the system. An extensive property of a system is directly proportional to the system size or the amount of material in the system. Since humidity is a measure of the composition of the atmosphere - specifically the amount of water vapor, it would be considered INTENSIVE. The only way it could be considered EXTENSIVE would be if you were to consider the earth a closed system and you were interested in how much of the water was in the oceans, lakes, rivers snowpack, ground, air, Evian bottles etc. In that case, the humidity would vary with the size of the system - the value would depend on whether you were taking a sample in a closed room or taking the entire air mass over the Pacific Ocean. Even then, the average value would still be an intensive property.
An intensive property is one that does not depend on the amount of substance present. So, compressibility would be an INTENSIVE property.
Intensive/extensive are not adequate terms for the age.
Not likely. It would mainly cause a poor running engine.
In thermodynamics, intensive quantities do not depend on the size of the system. For example temperature and density are size-independent, intensive quantities.Extensive quantities, on the other hand, are proportional to the size of the system: volume is an obvious one, internal energy and entropy are others.A quick mental test is this: if I were to double the system's size by joining it to a duplicate of itself, would the relevant quantity remain the same or double? If it stays the same it is intensive, otherwise it is extensive.
To identify an unknown substance, you would typically use its intensive properties. Intensive properties, such as density, boiling point, and specific heat, are independent of the amount of substance present and are useful for identifying specific materials.
Temperature would be an intensive property, because it does not depend on the amount of substance being investigated.
Operating systems are essential for running a computer. However as part of the operating system, there are often other programs which are not essential to the running of the computer. These are known as utilities. Examples would include things like the . If they were not there, they would not affect the working of your computer.
Pressure is an intensive property. Perhaps intuition would say it should be extensive (dependent on the size of the system), but if you think about it, you can have two systems of totally different size (and even composition) which both have the same pressure - so it is clearly independent of system size. Sometimes people get confused because if you take a fixed system and start changing other extensive properties like the amount of mass in the system, the pressure can change.