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Table 1. Clock skew sensitivity of the latency results

in Clock Tree Optimization in Synchronous CMOS Digital Circuits for Substrate Noise Reduction Using Folding of Supply Current Transients
by Mustafa Badaroglu, Kris Tiri, Stephane Donnay, Piet Wambacq, Ingrid Verbauwhede, Georges Gielen, Hugo De Man
"... In PAGE 5: ... In this example, the spectral power of the supply current has been reduced by 6dB. Table1 shows the clock skew sensitivity figures, explained in section 5, of the latency optimization results. Table 1.... ..."

Table 3. Latency increase of the TMC handling task in percentage to the normal latency (performance sensitivity) per architecture.

in Quality-Oriented Design Space Exploration for Component-Based Architectures
by Egor Bondarev A, Michel R. V. Chaudron A, Jiang Zhang A, Arjen Klomp B
"... In PAGE 14: ....05 events/s and TMCStimulus to 0.35 events/s). Then we re-simulated the adjusted scenarios and obtained new task latencies. Table3 represents the increase of the latency of the TMC handling task in percentage to the normal latency per architecture. For instance, end-to-end delay of the TMC message handling task for architecture A increases by 57.... ..."

Table 1: This table compares the latency of DNS requests with the round trip time between two hosts in Planetlab. It shows that DHTs need to provide better than single-hop lookup performance to compete with latency sensitive ap- plications.

in Proactive Caching for Better than Single-Hop Lookup Performance
by Venugopalan Ramasubramanian, Emin Gün Sirer
"... In PAGE 1: ... However, recent stud- ies have shown that the lookup performance provided by most structured distributed hash tables (DHTs) is inad- equate to support latency sensitive applications such as the domain name service (DNS) and web content distri- bution [3]. Table1 shows a comparison of the mean and median latencies for a DNS request with the mean and median round trip times between two hosts in Planetlab. The average latency of a DNS request is comparable to the average round trip time in the Internet.... ..."
Cited by 1

Table 3, below, outlines the sensitivity of different Internet applications to problems with network availability, latency, jitter, and packet loss.

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2006

Table 3 Application Sensitivity to Network Behaviour

in unknown title
by unknown authors 2006
"... In PAGE 17: ...3.2 The Impact of Network Behaviour on the User Experience Table3 , below, outlines the sensitivity of different Internet applications to problems with network availability, latency, jitter, and packet loss. ... ..."

Table 4: Longer Latencies for Memory Operations.

in The Benefits of Clustering in Shared Address Space Multiprocessors: An Applications-Driven Investigation
by Andrew Erlichson, Basem A. Nayfeh, Jaswinder P. Singh, Kunle Olukotun 1995
"... In PAGE 12: ... The performance effect of communication misses is particularly sensitive to increases in miss penalty as these misses must be satisfied by another cluster. Table4 lists the new latencies used to obtain the results for four of our applications, as shown in Figure 4. These latencies are more typical of recently proposed large scale distributedmemory machines.... ..."
Cited by 14

Table 4: Longer Latencies for Memory Operations.

in The benefits of clustering in shared address space multiprocessors: An applications-driven investigation
by Andrew Erlichson, Basem A. Nayfeh, Jaswinder P. Singh Y, Kunle Olukotun 1995
"... In PAGE 12: ... The performance effect of communication misses is particularly sensitive to increases in miss penalty as these misses must be satisfied by another cluster. Table4 lists the new latencies used to obtain the results for four of our applications, as shown in Figure 4. These latencies are more typical of recently proposed large scale distributedmemory machines.... ..."
Cited by 14

Table 1: The scheduling error and latency for different scheduling mechanisms with different application behaviors.

in Abstract Tycoon: a Distributed Market-based Resource Allocation System
by unknown authors 2004
"... In PAGE 7: ... We run 1,000 timeslices of 10ms. Table1 shows the latency and fairness for differ- ent mechanisms and different application behaviors. Weight is the weight (for proportional share) or in- come rate (for auction scheduling) given the web server.... In PAGE 7: ... Mean Latency is the mean latency for the latency-sensitive application to service requests. The second row of Table1 shows that proportional share scheduling provides low error, but high latency. Note that this latency is proportional to the total num- ber of runnable processes in the system, which is only four in our simulations.... ..."

Table 3 - Average and Median of the Latency Estimation Error

in Evaluating web user perceived latency using server side measurements
by Marik Marshak, Hanoch Levy 2003
"... In PAGE 9: ... The RTT measurements subject to some errors due to variability, however our results are not sensitive greatly to it. Table3 summarizes the median and average of the estimation error. The table shows also the median value of the estimation error because the average values are shifted by the few high errors in the test runs under overloaded server.... ..."
Cited by 4

TABLE 5 ASSESSMENT OF AND INTENTION TO TREAT INFECTION IN CHRONIC WOUNDS

in ABSTRACT Earn up to 2.0 CE credits by taking the quiz at the end of this article Preparing the Wound Bed – Debridement, Bacterial Balance, and Moisture Balance
by Sibbald Bscphm
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