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  2. Throughput (business) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Throughput_(business)

    Using Little's Law, one can calculate throughput with the equation: = where: I is the number of units contained within the system, inventory; T is the time it takes for all the inventory to go through the process, flow time; R is the rate at which the process is delivering throughput, flow rate or throughput.

  3. Network throughput - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_throughput

    Throughput is usually measured in bits per second (bit/s, sometimes abbreviated bps), and sometimes in packets per second (p/s or pps) or data packets per time slot. The system throughput or aggregate throughput is the sum of the data rates that are delivered over all channels in a network. [1] Throughput represents digital bandwidth consumption.

  4. Measuring network throughput - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Measuring_network_throughput

    Reasons for measuring throughput in networks. People are often concerned about measuring the maximum data throughput in bits per second of a communications link or network access. A typical method of performing a measurement is to transfer a 'large' file from one system to another system and measure the time required to complete the transfer or ...

  5. Throughput accounting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Throughput_accounting

    Throughput Accounting uses three measures of income and expense: The chart illustrates a typical throughput structure of income (sales) and expenses (TVC and OE). T=Sales less TVC and NP=T less OE. Throughput (T) is the rate at which the system produces "goal units".

  6. Speedup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speedup

    Throughput of an architecture is the execution rate of a task: = = =, where ρ is the execution density (e.g., the number of stages in an instruction pipeline for a pipelined architecture); A is the execution capacity (e.g., the number of processors for a parallel architecture).

  7. First-pass yield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-pass_yield

    First-pass yield (FPY), also known as throughput yield (TPY), is defined as the number of units coming out of a process divided by the number of units going into that process over a specified period of time.

  8. Network performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_performance

    Throughput is the actual rate that information is transferred Latency the delay between the sender and the receiver decoding it, this is mainly a function of the signals travel time, and processing time at any nodes the information traverses

  9. Computer performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_performance

    Bandwidth sometimes defines the net bit rate (aka. peak bit rate, information rate, or physical layer useful bit rate), channel capacity, or the maximum throughput of a logical or physical communication path in a digital communication system. For example, bandwidth tests measure the maximum throughput of a computer network.