English to Portuguese Dictionary throughput

throughput

Taxa de transferência
definition
noun
Both ADSL and cable modems offer throughputs over 100 kbps, but as consumers learn more about the two technologies, they may start gravitating toward DSL.
the amount of material or items passing through a system or process.
example
The engine has been enhanced to make use of Hardware Transform and Lighting, and the higher 'throughput' of more recent cards.
falling 'throughput' and rising production costs
Alternatively, the box can be set to use both processors in tandem without failover protection, doubling its 'throughput' .
It also insisted there was capacity in the sector for the weekly 'throughput' of pigs.
a weekly 'throughput' of 200,000 shoppers
Being a major transit airport, Schipol has a 'throughput' of 40 million passengers a year.
We are delighted with the transaction 'throughput' and that we are the only banking institution to offer such facilities in the town.
The 'throughput' and the movement and what nurses have to do now in the ward area is just incredible, and the beds are never cold.
The result is that memory performance hampers the overall 'throughput' of today's systems.
With Tanglewood, however, Intel is moving away from its cache crushing chips and toward a more 'throughput' oriented design.
It could be that your new system is not getting as much 'throughput' to your hard disks as it should be.
Craig Bewley says that the 'throughput' of course candidates per month in Ireland is now hitting 1,000.
The incremental cost to add a new process is higher than the cost to increase the 'throughput' of an existing process.
fast data 'throughput'
Faster 'throughput' means the ability to deliver large files in the least amount of time.
Theoretical maximum 'throughputs' listed in specifications are rarely achieved in the real world.
The new line of three systems sets the industry benchmark with 30 nm sensitivity and 'throughputs' of up to 1,800 defects per hour.
We'll have higher capacities, and faster 'throughputs' , but the competitive landscape just isn't going to change.
Both ADSL and cable modems offer 'throughputs' over 100 kbps, but as consumers learn more about the two technologies, they may start gravitating toward DSL.
The network provides consistent data 'throughputs' of 1 MB / s for stationary users, with bursts up to 6 MB / s.
Even where raw 'throughputs' exceed a gigabit per second, geosynchronous satellites are supremely ill-suited to conveying IP traffic.
All systems have inputs, 'throughputs' , outputs, and a feedback loop.
The question is, do we really need the kind of 'throughputs' the new services are offering?
Credits: Google Translate
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