Throughput
1throughput — through‧put [ˈθruːpʊt] noun [uncountable] the amount of work, materials etc that can be dealt with in a particular period of time: • The airport has a weekly throughput of 100,000 passengers. • This machine has the throughput capacity of seven of …
2throughput — energy, activity, 1808, Scottish slang; from THROUGH (Cf. through) + PUT (Cf. put). Industrial sense is from 1915 …
3throughput — The rate at which a machine processes mail, usually designated in pieces per hour …
4throughput — ► NOUN ▪ the amount of material or items passing through a system or process …
5throughput — [thro͞o′poot΄] n. the amount of material put through a process in a given period, as by a computer …
6Throughput — This article is about the use of Throughput in communication networks. For disk drives, see Throughput (disk drive). For business management, see Throughput (business). In communication networks, such as Ethernet or packet radio, throughput or… …
7Throughput — In business, the rate at which an organization reaches a given goal. Throughput is generally viewed as the rate a business is able to produce a product or service for a given unit of time. Businesses with high throughput (output) levels are able… …
8Throughput — Se llama throughput al volumen de trabajo o de información que fluye a través de un sistema. Así también se le llama al volumen de información que fluye en las redes de datos. Particularmente significativo en almacenamiento de información y… …
9throughput — through|put [ˈθru:put] n [U] the amount of work, goods, or people that are dealt with in a particular period of time throughput of ▪ an airport with a weekly throughput of 100,000 passengers high/low throughput ▪ a large store with a high… …
10throughput — [[t]θru͟ːpʊt[/t]] N UNCOUNT The throughput of an organization or system is the amount of things it can do or deal with in a particular period of time. ...technologies which will allow us to get much higher throughput... There s still a reasonable …