Which of real time, real-time and realtime is correct when you are talking about seeing something as it happens?
That difference would be because the "near real-time" case is correct where it is used as a noun phrase, which is what the question was asking about. If you use it as a compound adjective, however, as in "a near-real-time display", then it's a triple-hyphenated-word. Er, I mean, a triple-hyphenated word.
prefixes - Is it near real time, near real-time, near-real time, or ...
How is "I will do it soon" lengthier than "I will make it shortly" or "I will do it in a short while"? And how is "in a few hours" really soon? Time is a relative concept. If you're under water, getting some air "really soon" means seconds, not hours. In geologic time, "really soon" could mean a thousand years. It's unclear what you are asking here.
These “real past” cases happen all the time in real speech and real writing, as Jones and Waller prove. Consider this arrangement: If she was[real] already home when he got there, then she took[real] the bus. That’s a real past case on both sides, and it would be ungrammatical to use “If she were” to attempt to mean the same thing.
CMS Wire: Amperity Redefines Real-Time Personalization With Profiles That Capture Every Customer Moment
New Real-Time Profiles combine live activity with complete customer history so brands can recognize every individual and respond instantly SEATTLE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--#CustomerData--Amperity, the ...
Amperity, a customer data cloud provider, today unveiled Real-Time Profiles, enabling companies to connect every live customer signal with the full historical profile for real-time personalization.