enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Trace cache - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trace_cache

    The earliest academic publication of trace cache was "Trace Cache: a Low Latency Approach to High Bandwidth Instruction Fetching". [1] This widely acknowledged paper was presented by Eric Rotenberg, Steve Bennett, and Jim Smith at 1996 International Symposium on Microarchitecture (MICRO) conference.

  3. List of interface bit rates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_interface_bit_rates

    This approximately halves the effective bandwidth. 802.11 networks in ad hoc mode are still half-duplex, but devices communicate directly rather than through an access point. In this mode all devices must be able to see each other, instead of only having to be able to see the access point.

  4. WiMAX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiMAX

    In the future, competition will be from the evolution of the major cellular standards to 4G, high-bandwidth, low-latency, all-IP networks with voice services built on top. The worldwide move to 4G for GSM/UMTS and AMPS / TIA (including CDMA2000) is the 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE) effort.

  5. Time-Sensitive Networking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time-Sensitive_Networking

    The worst-case latency requirement is defined as 2 ms for Class A and 50 ms for Class B, but has been shown to be unreliable. [5] [6] The per-port peer delay provided by gPTP and the network bridge residence delay are added to calculate the accumulated delays and ensure the latency requirement is met. Control traffic has the third-highest ...

  6. InfiniBand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InfiniBand

    InfiniBand (IB) is a computer networking communications standard used in high-performance computing that features very high throughput and very low latency. It is used for data interconnect both among and within computers.

  7. Bandwidth-delay product - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandwidth-delay_product

    In data communications, the bandwidth-delay product is the product of a data link's capacity (in bits per second) and its round-trip delay time (in seconds). [1] The result, an amount of data measured in bits (or bytes), is equivalent to the maximum amount of data on the network circuit at any given time, i.e., data that has been transmitted but not yet acknowledged.

  8. Network performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_performance

    The speed of light imposes a minimum propagation time on all electromagnetic signals. It is not possible to reduce the latency below = / where s is the distance and c m is the speed of light in the medium (roughly 200,000 km/s for most fiber or electrical media, depending on their velocity factor).

  9. RDMA over Converged Ethernet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RDMA_over_Converged_Ethernet

    Network-intensive applications like networked storage or cluster computing need a network infrastructure with a high bandwidth and low latency. The advantages of RDMA over other network application programming interfaces such as Berkeley sockets are lower latency, lower CPU load and higher bandwidth. [6]