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  2. Floating licensing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_licensing

    Floating licensing, also known as concurrent licensing or network licensing, is a software licensing approach in which a limited number of licenses for a software application are shared among a larger number of users over time. [1] When an authorized user wishes to run the application, they request a license from a central license server. If a ...

  3. Genesys (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genesys_(company)

    Genesys Cloud Services, Inc. (Genesys), formerly Genesys Telecommunications Laboratories, Inc., is an American software company that sells customer experience (CX) and call center technology to mid-sized and large businesses. [2] It sells both cloud-based and hybrid cloud software.

  4. Configuration lifecycle management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Configuration_lifecycle...

    Example of different business processes depending on configuration lifecycle management Behind the seemingly simple process of configuring and ordering a configurable product, such as a car, lie several business processes of which configuration is an essential part:

  5. Contingent claim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contingent_claim

    In financial economics, contingent claim analysis is widely used as a framework both for developing pricing models, and for extending the theory. [6] Thus, from its origins in option pricing and the valuation of corporate liabilities, [7] it has become a major approach to intertemporal equilibrium under uncertainty.

  6. Cost-plus pricing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost-plus_pricing

    Cost-plus pricing is a pricing strategy by which the selling price of a product is determined by adding a specific fixed percentage (a "markup") to the product's unit cost. Essentially, the markup percentage is a method of generating a particular desired rate of return. [1] [2] An alternative pricing method is value-based pricing. [3]

  7. Concurrent computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concurrent_computing

    Concurrent computations may be executed in parallel, [3] [6] for example, by assigning each process to a separate processor or processor core, or distributing a computation across a network. The exact timing of when tasks in a concurrent system are executed depends on the scheduling , and tasks need not always be executed concurrently.

  8. Concurrency control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concurrency_control

    This model provides a different concurrency control behavior with benefits in many cases. The most common mechanism type in database systems since their early days in the 1970s has been Strong strict Two-phase locking (SS2PL; also called Rigorous scheduling or Rigorous 2PL ) which is a special case (variant) of Two-phase locking (2PL).

  9. 4+1 architectural view model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4+1_architectural_view_model

    Illustration of the 4+1 Architectural View Model. 4+1 is a view model used for "describing the architecture of software-intensive systems, based on the use of multiple, concurrent views". [1] The views are used to describe the system from the viewpoint of different stakeholders, such as end-users, developers, system engineers, and project managers.