0 (of information or printed text) able to be understood and used by a computer:
1 (of information or text) in a form that can be used by a computer
The advent of machine-readable identification documents has made gathering the information more feasible.
Holders of existing machine readable passports will still be able to travel without a visa.
He wants data published in standard machine readable formats.
More interestingly, the mapping opens up the possibility for m-piro to generate object descriptions in both human-readable and machine-readable forms.
Many sense inventories have been taken from traditional paper-based (and from machine-readable) dictionaries.
It is this survey, now available as a machine-readable database, which provides the empirical base for this article.
My generation of researchers was the first to have machine-readable data.
There was no such thing as machine-readable data.