Bandwidth refers to the maximum data transfer capacity of a network connection, while throughput is the actual amount of data transmitted over that connection in a given time period. Generally, higher bandwidth can lead to higher throughput, but factors like network congestion, latency, and protocol overhead can affect this relationship. Therefore, while bandwidth sets the potential upper limit for throughput, real-world conditions often result in throughput being lower than the available bandwidth.
T1 line
Throughput in a Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) can be calculated by measuring the amount of data successfully transmitted over a network during a specific time period. It is typically expressed in bits per second (bps). The formula to calculate throughput is: [ \text{Throughput} = \frac{\text{Total Data Delivered}}{\text{Total Time Taken}} ] To get an accurate measurement, consider only the data that reaches the destination successfully, excluding retransmissions or lost packets.
Theoretical: pertaining to, or consisting in theory
throughput
11 Mbps
d. 802.11n
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Security.
Throughput in Oil & gas industry
In asymmetrical communication, downstream throughput is higher than upstream throughput.
Full duplex has the highest throughput concering communication.
The throughput of a gigabit network connection can vary somewhat based on things such as the speed of the CPU, however, the average throughput is around 300Mb/s. The symbol for giga is G.
If they are all individually powered, but if they are on a splitter or hub that with no booster, then they will be fractionary.
100 Mbps is a theoretical limit and never could be achieved. Also, if you are running half-duplex or/and shared channel it would decrease performance significantly.
The disadvantages of throughput accounting is that it is very costly. The system might require the retraining of the staff which is a costly exercise.
a static ip does not have any effect on throughput it simply mean your ip address will not change