| throughput | yield; rate of transfer, amount of data that may be transferred in a data channel or through a device in one second (Computers) | en | (isim) | en |
| throughput | output relative to input; the amount passing through a system from input to output (especially of a computer program over a period of time) | en | en |
| throughput | The throughput of an organization or system is the amount of things it can do or deal with in a particular period of time. technologies which will allow us to get much higher throughput. throughput of | en | en |
| throughput | The amount of data that can be sent from one location to another in a specific amount of time, usually measured in Kbps, Mbps, or Gbps Back to Top | en | en |
| throughput | Throughput refers to the performance of data transmission, and is measured by characters actually transmitted or received during a certain period of time The throughput of a connection depends on CPU, memory, performance between the two devices, pattern of measurement, as well as the performance of the operating system Throughput is usually measured in bps (bits per second) | en | en |
| throughput | - The amount of I/O requests that can be completed within a given amount of time | en | en |
| throughput | Throughput is the amount of data that can be processed in a given amount of time, measured in bits, packets, etc per second as appropriate | en | en |
| throughput | The amount of data transmitted through Internet connectors in response to a given request Neat term The more "throughput" you deliver to your customers, the better (if you're charging enough) | en | en |
| throughput | The rate at which a measurement can be made, scaled to engineering units, and stored in Final Storage The datalogger can scan sensors at rates exceeding the throughput rate (see Sample Rate) The primary factor affecting throughput rate is the amount of processing specified by the user In normal operation, all processing called for by an instruction must be completed before moving on to the next instruction | en | en |
| throughput | The total number of bits of data received from the web server expressed in megabits per second This includes the HTTP response header So reading the 500-byte file ("/file500 html") will add more than 500 to the total bytes If any of the above errors occur then any bytes read for that request are not counted towards the total This means that if an error occurs while reading the last byte of the 5 MB file then none of that 5 MB counts towards the total throughput | en | en |
| throughput | (n ) A measure of the work of a computer system in a set period (for example, floating-point instructions per second) | en | en |
| throughput | The amount of actual user data transmitted per second without the overhead of protocol information such as Start and Stop bits of frame headers and trailers The higher your throughput, the faster you can surf the internet | en | en |
| throughput | The amount of data transmitted through internet connectors in response to a given request Neat term The more "throughput" you deliver to your customers, the better (if you're charging enough) | en | en |
| throughput | The number of bits, characters, or blocks which can pass through a data communications system, or portion thereof, when the system is working at saturation | en | en |
| throughput | A measure of the data transfer rate through a typically complex communications system or of the data-processing rate in a computer system | en | en |
| throughput | The end result of data transmission (for a given period of time) It is a measure of the overall efficiency, quality and performance of a communications link and its software / protocols | en | en |
| throughput | The average amount of raw material that is processed in a given period by a facility, such as a natural gas processing plant, an oil refinery or a petrochemical plant | en | en |
| throughput | The quantity/speed of information transferred through an internet connection Throughput is usually expressed in BPS (bits per second) or MEGS (megabytes per second) | en | en |
| throughput | The amount of gas traveling through the natural gas delivery system | en | en |
| throughput | how much data is moved in a certain amount of time Usually measured in kilobytes per second (Kbps) or megabytes per second (Mbsp) | en | en |
| throughput | A measure of the volume of data which can be transmitted (typically per second) through a given communications system | en | en |
| throughput | the amount of information processed in a given time | en | en |
| throughput | 1) The volume of output generated by a resource in a specific period of time 2) In the theory of constraints, the rate at which a system generates money tier 1, 2 supplier- A tier 1 supplier is the immediate or primary set of vendors directly used by a company, and tier 2 is a vendor to tier 1 In some industries the final customers or dominant chain partners are consolidating (reducing) their number of tier 1 suppliers, and requiring proof of the communications and fulfillment capabilities between tier 1 and tier 2 | en | en |
| throughput | Throughput means transmission performance that means actually transmitted or received characters during certain period of time Figure of throughput depends on CPU, Memory, performance between 2 devices, pattern of measurement, as well as performance of the operating system It's usually measured in BPS (Byte Per Second) | en | en |
| throughput | Output or production, as of a computer program, over a period of time | en | en |
| throughput | In vacuum technology, the quantity of gas in pressure-volume units at a specified temperature flowing per unit time across a specified open section of a pump or pipeline The specified temperature may be the actual temperature of the gas or a standard reference temperature It is recommended that throughput be referred to standard room temperature The recommended unit of throughput is the torr liter per second at 20 degrees C Other units of throughput in common use are micron liters per second at 25 degrees C and micron cubic feet per minute at 68 degrees F Under conditions of steady-state conservative flow the throughput across the entrance to a pipe is equal to the throughput at the exit In this case throughput can be defined as the quantity of gas flowing through a pipe in pressure-volume units per unit time at room temperature | en | en |
| throughput | The amount of data transmitted between two points in a given amount of time | en | en |
| throughput | – The volume of gas put through an LDC's lines over a given time period; includes sales and transportation volumes | en | en |