The term "zero threaded" appears to be a made up marketing term. None of the companies that claim their products feature a "zero threaded architecture" have been able to satisfactorily explain what it means.
It appears to mean that no threads are dedicated to a particular function. However, some companies claim this is a "unique feature" of their product when competitors also do not dedicate threads to functions.
It's basically a made up technical-sounding term intended to be something only the person who makes it up has. The goal being to get a line item with a check in their column and not their competitors, like how only Dannon has "L. casei Immunitas". Of course only they have it, they made it up and trademarked it. Only Coke "adds life", not your cheap supermarket cola.
In throttling process, work done is zero.
It was there as part of the process of making it.
The process of inserting zero-valued samples in between original samples is called "upsampling," In digital signal processing, this process can also be called "zero-stuffing."
Pririty zero can be set from the task manager. It is the lowest priority of a process. Process with priority zero will be processed least.
No. As a mathematical process, division by zero is not allowed. (for more on why, see the related question and link)
Zero is not used as the divisor when dividing with the process of division.
Multi-Threaded processors are like caches in the way that they make multi-tasking easier. Some processors are "hyper-threaded", meaning they have many threads in comparison to their number of cores (usually 2x), and are very good for those who wish to run many programs simultaneously.
In digital signal processing, the practice of inserting zero-valued samples in between original samples is called "upsampling." This process can also be called "zero-stuffing."
No deck is threaded it is the headset and the forks that can be threaded or threadless
A flange threaded in center used for weld or different types of threaded pipe.
Not quite. Division by zero is not recognised as a mathematical process, so your question has in fact no meaning!
yes ,we can weld this. welding is the process of joining two materials .we can join this by spot welding or by arc welding.