Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A butterfly network is a technique to link multiple computers into a high-speed network. This form of multistage interconnection network topology can be used to connect different nodes in a multiprocessor system.
Butterfly Network sells a hand-held ultrasound imaging device that connects to an iPhone, called the iQ. [17] The core technology is a silicon chip, contrasting with other ultrasound devices that use piezoelectric crystals. [17] The use of silicon makes the device far cheaper to manufacture. [17]
Gregory L. Charvat is author of Small and Short-Range Radar Systems, Co-Founder of Butterfly Network Inc, and advisor to the Camera Culture Group at Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT Media Lab.
Butterfly Network. The butterfly network [8] is often used to illustrate how linear network coding can outperform routing. Two source nodes (at the top of the picture) have information A and B that must be transmitted to the two destination nodes (at the bottom). Each destination node wants to know both A and B.
The Butterfly was initially developed as the Voice Funnel, a router for the ST-II protocol intended for carrying voice and video over IP networks. The Butterfly hardware was later used for the Butterfly Satellite IMP (BSAT) packet switch of DARPA's Wideband Packet Satellite Network which operated at multiple sites around the US over a shared 3 ...
The butterfly graph has five vertices and six edges; it is formed by two triangles that share a vertex. 2. The butterfly network is a graph used as a network architecture in distributed computing, closely related to the cube-connected cycles .
English: The butterfly network, a communications network used in distributed computing and fast Fourier transform algorithms. The highlighted red nodes and edges show the subset of the butterfly reachable from one of its nodes. For each subset, the reachable subgraph forms a complete binary tree, showing that the butterfly is a multitree.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us