REDUNDANCIES - significado y definición. Qué es REDUNDANCIES
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Qué (quién) es REDUNDANCIES - definición

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Redundant; Redundancies; Redundancy (computing); Redundance; Redundancy (disambiguation)

redundancy         
(redundancies)
1.
When there are redundancies, an organization tells some of its employees to leave because their jobs are no longer necessary or because the organization can no longer afford to pay them. (BRIT BUSINESS; in AM, use dismissals
, layoffs
)
The ministry has said it hopes to avoid compulsory redundancies.
N-COUNT: usu pl
2.
Redundancy means being made redundant. (BUSINESS)
Thousands of bank employees are facing redundancy as their employers cut costs...
N-UNCOUNT
Redundancy         
·noun That which is redundant or in excess; anything superfluous or superabundant.
II. Redundancy ·noun The quality or state of being redundant; superfluity; superabundance; excess.
III. Redundancy ·noun Surplusage inserted in a pleading which may be rejected by the court without impairing the validity of what remains.
redundancy         
1. <architecture, parallel> The provision of multiple interchangeable components to perform a single function in order to provide resilience (to cope with failures and errors). Redundancy normally applies primarily to hardware. For example, a cluster may contain two or three computers doing the same job. They could all be active all the time thus giving extra performance through parallel processing and load balancing; one could be active and the others simply monitoring its activity so as to be ready to take over if it failed ("warm standby"); the "spares" could be kept turned off and only switched on when needed ("cold standby"). Another common form of hardware redundancy is {disk mirroring}. Redundancy can also be used to detect and recover from errors, either in hardware or software. A well known example of this is the cyclic redundancy check which adds redundant data to a block in order to detect corruption during storage or transmission. If the cost of errors is high enough, e.g. in a safety-critical system, redundancy may be used in both hardware AND software with three separate computers programmed by three separate teams ("triple redundancy") and some system to check that they all produce the same answer, or some kind of majority voting system. 2. <communications> The proportion of a message's gross information content that can be eliminated without losing essential information. Technically, redundancy is one minus the ratio of the actual uncertainty to the maximum uncertainty. This is the fraction of the structure of the message which is determined not by the choice of the sender, but rather by the accepted statistical rules governing the choice of the symbols in question. [Shannon and Weaver, 1948, p. l3] (1995-05-09)

Wikipedia

Redundancy

Redundancy or redundant may refer to:

Ejemplos de uso de REDUNDANCIES
1. He said: "In the 80s and '0s, there were just redundancies and redundancies.
2. And in some hospitals, there are staff facing redundancies." But Ms Hewitt admitted some redundancies could be squarely blamed on flawed management strategies.
3. This came after widespread redundancies in 2004 in the financial services and information technology sectors, which in turn led to redundancies and pay cuts for many nannies.
4. Compulsory redundancies would be kept "to a minimum", she said.
5. Factual: Closure of 420 posts, resulting in around 3'0 redundancies.