end-to-end solution - определение. Что такое end-to-end solution
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Что (кто) такое end-to-end solution - определение

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
End to End; End-to-end (disambiguation)
Найдено результатов: 18705
end-to-end solution      
<jargon> (E2ES) A term that suggests that the supplier of an application program or system will provide all the hardware and/or software components and resouces to meet the customer's requirement and no other supplier need be involved. Compare: turn-key solution. (2006-03-30)
End-to-end auditable voting systems         
VOTING SYSTEM
End-to-End Auditable Voting Systems; Cryptographic voting system; End-to-end verification
End-to-end auditable or end-to-end voter verifiable (E2E) systems are voting systems with stringent integrity properties and strong tamper resistance. E2E systems often employ cryptographic methods to craft receipts that allow voters to verify that their votes were counted as cast, without revealing which candidates were voted for.
End (gridiron football)         
  • [[Don Hutson]] catches a pass.
  • The old single wing formation showing ends labeled
POSITION IN AMERICAN AND CANADIAN FOOTBALL
End (football); End (American football); End (Canadian football); End (American and Canadian football); Offensive end
An end in American and Canadian football is a player who lines up at either end of the line of scrimmage, usually beside the tackles. Rules state that a legal offensive formation must always consist of seven players on the line of scrimmage and that the player on the end of the line constitutes an eligible receiver.
The war to end war         
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TERM FOR WORLD WAR I
War to End All Wars; War to End War; The war to end all wars; The War to End All Wars; War To End All Wars; War to end all wars; War to End all Wars; The war to end all war; War to end all war; War to end war
"The war to end war" (also "The war to end all wars";The war to end all wars BBC News 10 November 1998 originally from the 1914 book The War That Will End War by H. G.
back-end         
<programming> Any software performing either the final stage in a process, or a task not apparent to the user. A common usage is in a compiler. A compiler's back-end generates machine language and performs optimisations specific to the machine's architecture. The term can also be used in the context of network applications. E.g. "The back-end of the system handles socket protocols". Contrast front end. (1996-04-09)
back-end         
¦ adjective
1. relating to the end of a project, process, or investment.
2. Computing denoting a specialized subordinate processor or program, not directly accessed by the user.
East End of London         
  • Exact Survey of the city's of London Westminster ye Borough of Southwark and the Country near ten miles round]]''. London is expanding, but there are still large areas of fields to the east of the City.
  • 1867 Poster from the National Standard Theatre, [[Shoreditch]]
  • 1882 Reynolds Map of the East End. Development has now eliminated the open fields shown on the earlier map.
  • [[Gus Elen]], ''The Coster's Mansion'', 1899 sheet music
  • url=https://archive.org/details/makingmuslimspac0000unse/page/223}}</ref>
  • Aldgate Pump: the symbolic start of the East End
  • Canning Town greets Gandhi. Gandhi lived among ordinary East Enders for three months in 1931.
  • Lady Burdett-Coutts <!--- NOT Lady Angela or Lady Angela Burdett-Coutts.--->
  • [[Boundary Estate]] bandstand was built on the rubble from the clearance of the Old Nichol slum.
  • [[Brick Lane]] has been a centre for new immigration through the centuries
  • Anti-immigration poster, from 1902
  • Redevelopment on the Isle of Dogs
  • Ogilby & Morgan's 1673 map of London. The East End is developing outside [[Bishopsgate]], [[Aldgate]] and along the river – it is separated from the other extramural suburbs by [[Moorfields]]
  • The extramural eastern wards of Bishopsgate Without and the Portsoken.
  • The Bethnal Green Mulberry, the East End's oldest tree.
  • HMS ''Albion'']] at Thames Ironworks in 1898 caused a displacement wave that killed 38 people.
  • [[Heinkel He 111]] bomber over the [[Surrey Commercial Docks]] in [[South London]] and [[Wapping]] and the [[Isle of Dogs]] on 7 September 1940
  • [[Hoxton Hall]], still an active community resource and performance space
  • [[Isambard Kingdom Brunel]] against the launching chains of the ''Great Eastern'' at Millwall in 1857
  • Stratford and Liverpool Street (pictured) stations, are among the busiest in the UK.
  • Thames]]) (pictured in 2016)
  • The London 2012 Opening Ceremony portrayed the trauma of the Industrial Revolution
  • London in 1300, development is mainly limited to the walled area.
  • The [[Olympic Bell]], at the London Stadium.
  • Olympic Stadium]] under construction in June 2011
  • The first Bethlem (or Bedlam) Hospital, outside Bishopsgate, beside the Deepditch, a part of the Walbrook river.
  • Old Nichol]] slum. Published 1889 in ''[[Life and Labour of the People in London]]''. The red areas are "middle class, well-to-do", light blue areas are "poor, 18s to 21s a week for a moderate family", dark blue areas are "very poor, casual, chronic want", and black areas are the "lowest class...occasional labourers, street sellers, loafers, criminals and semi-criminals".
  • Prefabricated post-war home]] at [[Chiltern Open Air Museum]]: Universal House, steel frame clad with corrugated asbestos cement
  • The ''Bywell Castle'' bears down upon the ''Princess Alice'', 1878
  • Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, 2014
  • Royal Albert Dock, 1973
  • Dunstan was a 10th-century English saint closely linked to the East End.
  • Yorkist defenders sally from Aldgate (possibly Bishopsgate)
  • Sylvia Pankhurst 1882–1960
  • Deaths among women, children and the elderly shocked the public.
  • Tower Division]]
  • Curtain Theatre, c. 1600 (some sources identify this as a depiction of [[The Theatre]], the other Elizabethan theatre in [[Shoreditch]])
  • Children of an eastern suburb of London, made homeless by the Blitz
  • William Booth founded the Salvation Army, in Whitechapel, in 1878
  • The [[World Cup Sculpture]] at Upton Park
  • Tower Hamlets men bolstered the Tower of London garrison
AREA OF LONDON, ENGLAND
London's East End; East End; London; East End; East end of London; East end of london; The East End; East End (London); London East End; East End, London
The East End of London, often referred to within the London area simply as the East End, is the historic core of wider East London, east of the Roman and medieval walls of the City of London and north of the River Thames. It does not have universally accepted boundaries to the north and east, though the River Lea is sometimes seen as the eastern boundary.
West End, Edinburgh         
  • Georgian terrace houses on Atholl Crescent in Edinburgh
  • Albert Gallery, Shandwick Place
  • neoclassical]] work of Gillespie Graham
  • Water of Leith in the West End
  • Clarendon Crescent
  • 25 Melville Street
  • Drumsheugh Gardens
  • Edinburgh trams, Shandwick Place
  • Looking down at the West End side of the Lothian Road
  • Morrison Street and the Edinburgh International Conference Centre
  • Easter Coates House
  • Palmerston Place Church Edinburgh (completed 1875)
  • Rutland Square - home to a number of consulates
  • SNGMA The Building
  • St Marys Cathedral Edinburgh from Melville St
  • Stewart's Melville College
  • The Usher Hall from Festival Square, separated by the Lothian Road
  • Looking into the North of the West End over the Dean Bridge
SUBURB OF EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND, UK
Edinburgh's West End; Edinburgh, west end
The West End is an affluent district of Edinburgh, Scotland, which along with the rest of the New Town and Old Town forms central Edinburgh, and Edinburgh's UNESCO World Heritage Site. The area boasts several of the city's hotels, restaurants, independent shops, offices and arts venues, including the Edinburgh Filmhouse, Edinburgh International Conference Centre and the Caledonian Hotel.
end user         
  • NATO official and Afghan colonel going through end-user documentation to transfer control of barracks to the Afghan army in 2009
  • 1980s-era personal computer with end-user documentation
PERSON WHO ULTIMATELY USES OR IS INTENDED TO ULTIMATELY USE A PRODUCT; STANDS IN CONTRAST TO USERS WHO SUPPORT OR MAINTAIN THE PRODUCT
End-user (computer science); End user (computer science); Enduser; End users; End-users; End-user; End-user of a computer system; End user of a computer system; End user (computing); End-user (computing)
also end-user
The end user of a product or service is the person that it has been designed for, rather than the person who installs or maintains it.
You have to be able to describe things in a form that the end user can understand.
N-COUNT
end to end         
in a row with the ends touching or close together.

Википедия

End-to-end

End-to-end or End to End may refer to:

  • End-to-end auditable voting systems, a voting system
  • End-to-end delay, the time for a packet to be transmitted across a network from source to destination
  • End-to-end encryption, a cryptographic paradigm involving uninterrupted protection of data traveling between two communicating parties
  • End-to-end data integrity
  • End-to-end principle, a principal design element of the Internet
  • End-to-end reinforcement learning
  • End-to-end vector, points from one end of a polymer to the other end
  • Land's End to John o' Groats, the journey from "End to End" across Great Britain
  • End-to-end testing (see also: Verification and validation)