60 goes into 5400 exactly 90 times. This can be calculated by dividing 5400 by 60.
How many times does 5 go into 2 you ask? Here we will explain two ways of looking at this problem to solve it. "How many times does 5 go into 2?" is the same as asking "How much is 2 divided by 5?" Thus, the answer can be calculated as follows: 2/5 = 0.4
at one and one half times the hourly rate
3/8 of 48 can be calculated as 3/8 times 48.
Pi can be calculated to millions of decimal places and it has not come out even yet, so there is no apparent limit to the number of 1's that will appear in the calculation.
It will drop the frame
A CRC is used to check for integrity of some information, for example, a data packet. The CRC is calculated, according to some formula, from the remaining bytes in the packet, before sending the packet. The receiving end recalculates the CRC; if any of the bytes have become corrupted (say, through electrical noise during the transmission), the CRC will no longer match, and the receiver knows that the packet has been damaged.
Bushfire CRC was created in 2003.
CRC Press was created in 1973.
Poultry CRC was created in 2003.
CRC: Cyclical Redundancy CheckA term CRC is used in datalink protocols often used in transmission ..The CRC is computed while the packet is being transmitted and then incorporated in a trailer. Similarly, the receiver computes the CRC and compares it with the transmitted one. From both points of view, it is better to have the CRC in a trailer
CRC Churches International was created in 1945.
There are many organizations and companies which use "CRC" in their title. As far as I know, none of these are affiliated with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (commonly called the "Mormon" church). Additionally "CRC" is not an abbreviation or acronym used within the Mormon Church.
0.08 of an hour is 4.8 minutes. It is calculated by 0.08* times 60.
CRC stands for 'cyclic reundancy check' its a common technique for declecting data trasmission errors.
A Cyclic Redundancy Check is done as a first attempt to prevent corrupted data.
Each Ethernet frame contains a trailer with a cyclic redundancy check (CRC) of the frame contents. After reception of a frame, the receiving node creates a CRC from the bits in the frame to compare to the CRC value in the frame trailer. If these two CRC calculations match, the frame can be trusted as being received without error. The trusted frame will then be processed. A frame received with bad, nonmatching CRC's will be discarded.