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  2. Bottleneck (production) - Wikipedia

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

    In production and project management, a bottleneck is a process in a chain of processes, such that its limited capacity reduces the capacity of the whole chain. The result of having a bottleneck are stalls in production, supply overstock, pressure from customers, and low employee morale. [1] There are both short and long-term bottlenecks.

  3. Bottleneck (engineering) - Wikipedia

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

    In such context, a bottleneck link for a given data flow is a link that is fully utilized (is saturated) and of all the flows sharing this link, the given data flow achieves maximum data rate network-wide. [1] Note that this definition is substantially different from a common meaning of a bottleneck. Also note, that this definition does not ...

  4. Bottleneck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottleneck

    Bottleneck (production), where one process reduces capacity of the whole chain; Bottleneck (software), in software engineering; Interconnect bottleneck, limits on integrated circuit performance; Internet bottleneck, slowing the performance on the Internet at a particular point; Bottleneck, a design element of some firearms cartridge cases

  5. Theory of Constraints in streamline manufacturing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_Constraints_in...

    In streamline manufacturing, the bottleneck is the station of a production line where greatest limiting factor lies. It is generally the station with the greatest amount of work in process at the work station. Bottlenecks often results in slow production times, surplus of raw material and low employee morale.

  6. The big bottleneck for AI: a shortage of powerful chips - AOL

    www.aol.com/big-bottleneck-ai-shortage-powerful...

    Bottleneck to the bottleneck Compounding the issue is that GPU-makers themselves cannot get enough of a key input from their own suppliers, said Sid Sheth, founder and CEO of AI startup d-Matrix.

  7. 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]

  8. Theory of constraints - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_constraints

    Depending on their design and construction, these machines operate at different speeds and capacities and therefore have varying efficiency levels. A prominent example is the use of automated production lines in the beverage industry.

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