Throughput
21Throughput Accounting — (TA) is an alternative to cost accounting proposed by Eliyahu M. Goldratt [Eliyahu M. Goldratt and Jeff Cox The Goal ISBN 0 620 33597 1.] . Throughput accounting [Thomas Corbett Throughput Accounting ISBN 0 88427 158 7.] is not cost accounting or …
22Throughput rate — is an obsolete term [GoldBookRef|title=throughput rate|url=http://goldbook.iupac.org/T06368.html] in the terminology of automated chemical analysis. It may mean either:*Input rate *Output rateReferences …
23Throughput (business) — In the business management Theory of Constraints, throughput is the rate at which a system achieves its goal. Often this is monetary revenue and is in contrast to output, which is inventory that may be sold or stored in a warehouse. In this case… …
24throughput accounting — An approach to short term decision making in manufacturing in which all conversion costs are treated as though they were fixed and products are ranked if a particular constraint or scarce resource exists. Decisions are made using the throughput… …
25throughput accounting — An approach to short term decision making in manufacturing in which all conversion costs are treated as though they were fixed and products are ranked if a particular constraint or scarce resource exists. Decisions are made using the throughput… …
26throughput — /throoh poot /, n. the quantity or amount of raw material processed within a given time, esp. the work done by an electronic computer in a given period of time. Also, thruput. [1920 25; from phrase put through, modeled on output] * * * …
27throughput — A term applied to analytic instruments specifying the number of tests that can be performed in a given time …
28throughput — through|put [ θru,put ] noun singular or uncount the amount of work, people, or things that a system deals with in a particular period …
29throughput — n. yield; rate of transfer, amount of data that may be transferred in a data channel or through a device in one second (Computers) …
30Throughput — Not yet defined …