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A.1) Receiving and unloading 2) Storage placement B. The amount of product entering and leaving a facility in a given time period C. Transportation at zero miles per hour D.More differentiated than those in a public facility
Correct answer is The amount of product entering and leaving a facility in a given time period
b..............................................................................................
agree with expert answers above
Agree with all answer given by expert
Throughput in this context, the total time needed for product to enter the system, get processed and comes out as a finished product.
Thanks again for the invitation. I think the answer is «b».
I select B as the right answer
No doubt ... it is B answer ...
Thank You
Hello Team,
In general terms, throughput is the rate of production or the rate at which something can be processed.
When used in the context of communication networks, such as Ethernet or packet radio, throughput or network throughput is the rate of successful message delivery over a communication channel. The data these messages belong to may be delivered over a physical or logical link, or it can pass through a certain network node. Throughput is usually measured in bits per second (bit/s or bps), and sometimes in data 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 to all terminals in a network. Throughput is essentially synonymous to digital bandwidth consumption; it can be analyzed mathematically by applying the queueing theory, where the load in packets per time unit is denoted as the arrival rate (λ), and the throughput, in packets per time unit, is denoted as the departure rate (μ).
The throughput of a communication system may be affected by various factors, including the limitations of underlying analog physical medium, available processing power of the system components, and end-user behavior. When various protocol overheads are taken into account, useful rate of the transferred data can be significantly lower than the maximum achievable throughput; the useful part is usually referred to as goodput.
Regards,
Saiyid