Erlang loss formula - significado y definición. Qué es Erlang loss formula
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Qué (quién) es Erlang loss formula - definición

UNIT USED IN TELEPHONY AS A MEASURE OF OFFERED LOAD OR CARRIED LOAD
High-loss calculation; High Loss Calculations; Erlang units; Erlang B; Erlang-B; Erlang Telecommunications Unit; Erlang formula; Blocking probability; Erlang loss formula; Erlang unit; Extended Erlang B; Busy Hour Traffic; Busy hour traffic; Erlang's C formula

Hipe         
  • Mike Williams
  • Robert Virding and Joe Armstrong, 2013
PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Erlang language; Erlang programming language; HiPE; Core Erlang; Erlang/OTP; Erlang (Programming language); Data types in Erlang; Erlang.org
·add. ·- ·Alt. of Hype.
II. Hipe ·add. ·vt & ·vi To throw by means of a hipe.
Infant formula         
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  • Poster advertisement for Nestle's Milk by Théophile Alexandre Steinlen, 1895
  • A 1915 advertisement for "Nestlé's Food"
MANUFACTURED FOOD DESIGNED AND MARKETED FOR FEEDING OF INFANTS
Baby milk; Formula milk; Baby formula; Milk formula; Toddler formula; Infant Formula; Timeline of infant formula development; Formula feeding; Infant formula processing; Percentage method; Infant formulas; Breast-milk substitute; Hydrolyzed formula; Follow-on formula; Toddler milk; False milk; Infant milk
Infant formula, baby formula or just formula (American English) or baby milk, infant milk, false milk, or first milk (British English), is a manufactured food designed and marketed for feeding to babies and infants under 12 months of age, usually prepared for bottle-feeding or cup-feeding from powder (mixed with water) or liquid (with or without additional water). The U.
Loss (comic)         
  • ''Ctrl+Alt+Del'']]
  • A minimalist version of "Loss", consisting of only seven lines
2008 WEBCOMIC AND INTERNET MEME
Loss.jpg; Loss (Ctrl+Alt+Del); Loss (comics); Is this Loss?; Loss (meme); I-II-II-L; 1-2-2-50; Loss.jpeg; I-II-II-IL
"Loss", sometimes referred to as "Loss.jpg", is a strip published on June 2, 2008, by Tim Buckley for his gaming-related webcomic Ctrl+Alt+Del.

Wikipedia

Erlang (unit)

The erlang (symbol E) is a dimensionless unit that is used in telephony as a measure of offered load or carried load on service-providing elements such as telephone circuits or telephone switching equipment. A single cord circuit has the capacity to be used for 60 minutes in one hour. Full utilization of that capacity, 60 minutes of traffic, constitutes 1 erlang.

Carried traffic in erlangs is the average number of concurrent calls measured over a given period (often one hour), while offered traffic is the traffic that would be carried if all call-attempts succeeded. How much offered traffic is carried in practice will depend on what happens to unanswered calls when all servers are busy.

The CCITT named the international unit of telephone traffic the erlang in 1946 in honor of Agner Krarup Erlang. In Erlang's analysis of efficient telephone line usage he derived the formulae for two important cases, Erlang-B and Erlang-C, which became foundational results in teletraffic engineering and queueing theory. His results, which are still used today, relate quality of service to the number of available servers. Both formulae take offered load as one of their main inputs (in erlangs), which is often expressed as call arrival rate times average call length.

A distinguishing assumption behind the Erlang B formula is that there is no queue, so that if all service elements are already in use then a newly arriving call will be blocked and subsequently lost. The formula gives the probability of this occurring. In contrast, the Erlang C formula provides for the possibility of an unlimited queue and it gives the probability that a new call will need to wait in the queue due to all servers being in use. Erlang's formulae apply quite widely, but they may fail when congestion is especially high causing unsuccessful traffic to repeatedly retry. One way of accounting for retries when no queue is available is the Extended Erlang B method.