slovo | definícia |
Mux (gcide) | Mux \Mux\, n. [Cf. Mixen.]
Dirt; filth; muck. [Prov. Eng.] --ose.
[1913 Webster] |
Mux (gcide) | Mux \Mux\, v. t.
To mix in an untidy and offensive way; to make a mess of.
[Prov. Eng.; Colloq. U.S.]
[1913 Webster] |
mux (foldoc) | multiplexing
multiple access
multiplexer
multiplexor
mux
1. (Or "multiple access") Combining several
signals for transmission on some shared medium (e.g. a
telephone wire). The signals are combined at the transmitter
by a multiplexor (a "mux") and split up at the receiver by a
demultiplexor. The communications channel may be shared
between the independent signals in one of several different
ways: time division multiplexing, {frequency division
multiplexing}, or code division multiplexing.
If the inputs take turns to use the output channel ({time
division multiplexing}) then the output bandwidth need be no
greater than the maximum bandwidth of any input.
If many inputs may be active simultaneously then the output
bandwidth must be at least as great as the total bandwidth of
all simultaneously active inputs. In this case the
multiplexor is also known as a concentrator.
(1995-03-02)
2. Writing multiple logical copies of data
files. Placing the copies on totally separate paths to
mirrored devices greatly reduces the probability of all
copies being corrupt. Multiplexing differs from mirroring in
that mirroring takes one data file and copies it to many
devices, thus making it possible to copy a corrupt file many
times. Multiplexing writes the data files to many places
simultaneously; there is no "original" data file.
(2001-05-10)
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mux (vera) | MUX
MUltipleXer
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| podobné slovo | definícia |
Mux (gcide) | Mux \Mux\, n. [Cf. Mixen.]
Dirt; filth; muck. [Prov. Eng.] --ose.
[1913 Webster]Mux \Mux\, v. t.
To mix in an untidy and offensive way; to make a mess of.
[Prov. Eng.; Colloq. U.S.]
[1913 Webster] |
Muxy (gcide) | Muxy \Mux"y\, a.
Soft; sticky, and dirty. [Prov. Eng.] See Mucky.
[1913 Webster] |
statmux (foldoc) | statistical time division multiplexing
StatMUX
STDM
(STDM, StatMUX) A system developed to
overcome some inefficiencies of standard {time division
multiplexing}, where time slices are still allocated to
channels, even if they have no information to transmit.
STDM uses a variable time slot length and by allowing channels
to vie for any free slot space. It employs a buffer memory
which temporarily stores the data during periods of peak
traffic. This scheme allows STDM to waste no high-speed line
time with inactive channels. STDM requires each transmission
to carry identification information (i.e. a channel
identifier). To reduce the cost of this overhead, a number of
characters for each channel are grouped together for
transmission.
["Data Communications, Computer Networks and Open Systems",
Halsall & Fred, Addison Wesley, p160-161, 1995].
["Digital, Analog, and Data Communication", Sinnema &
McGovern, Prentice Hall, p245, 1986].
(1997-03-05)
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csmux (vera) | CSMUX
Circuit Switching MUltipleXer (FDDI), "CS-MUX"
|
hmux (vera) | HMUX
Hybrid MUltipleXer (FDDI), "H-MUX"
|
smux (vera) | SMUX
SNMP MUltipleXing protocol (SNMP, MUX, RFC 1227)
|
tmux (vera) | TMUX
Transport MUltipleXing protocol (RFC 1692), "TMux"
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