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  2. Bottleneck (production) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottleneck_(production)

    Almost every system has a bottleneck, even if it is a minor one. If every system was running at full capacity, at least one machine would be accumulating processes. [3] Identifying bottlenecks is critical for improving efficiency in the production line because it allows you to determine the area where accumulation occurs.

  3. Internet bottleneck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_bottleneck

    The bottleneck occurs in a network when there are too many users attempting to access a specific resource. Internet bottlenecks provide artificial and natural network choke points to inhibit certain sets of users from overloading the entire network by consuming too much bandwidth.

  4. Bottleneck (engineering) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottleneck_(engineering)

    The component is sometimes called a bottleneck point. The term is metaphorically derived from the neck of a bottle, where the flow speed of the liquid is limited by its neck. Formally, a bottleneck lies on a system's critical path and provides the lowest throughput. Bottlenecks are usually avoided by system designers, also a great amount of ...

  5. Amdahl's law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amdahl's_law

    Non-Parallelizable Work: Amdahl's Law emphasizes the non-parallelizable portion of the task as a bottleneck but doesn’t provide solutions for reducing or optimizing this portion. Assumes Homogeneous Processors : It assumes that all processors are identical and contribute equally to speedup, which may not be the case in heterogeneous computing ...

  6. Shifting bottleneck heuristic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shifting_bottleneck_heuristic

    The Shifting Bottleneck Heuristic is a procedure intended to minimize the time it takes to do work, or specifically, the makespan in a job shop. The makespan is defined as the amount of time, from start to finish, to complete a set of multi-machine jobs where machine order is pre-set for each job.

  7. Throughput accounting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Throughput_accounting

    Throughput Accounting also pays particular attention to the concept of 'bottleneck' (referred to as constraint in the Theory of Constraints) in the manufacturing or servicing processes. Throughput Accounting uses three measures of income and expense: The chart illustrates a typical throughput structure of income (sales) and expenses (TVC and OE).

  8. Bottleneck (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottleneck_(software)

    A system or application will hit a bottleneck if the work arrives at a comparatively faster pace relative to other processing components. [3] According to the theory of constraints, improving on the occurrences of hot-spot point of the bottleneck constraint improves the overall processing speed of the software. [4]

  9. Bottleneck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottleneck

    Bottleneck (engineering), where the performance of an entire system is limited by a single component; Bottleneck (network), in a communication network; Bottleneck (production), where one process reduces capacity of the whole chain; Bottleneck (software), in software engineering; Interconnect bottleneck, limits on integrated circuit performance