Results 251 to 260 of about 5,196 (282)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Upper Bounds for a Theory of Queues
2003We prove an upper bound result for the first-order theory of a structure W of queues, i.e. words with two relations: addition of a letter on the left and on the right of a word. Using complexity-tailored Ehrenfeucht games we show that the witnesses for quantified variables in this theory can be bound by words of an exponential length.
Rybina, Tatiana, Voronkov, Andrei
openaire +3 more sources
On Queueing Theory and Two-Dimensional Queueing Models
1983Queueing Theory is very briefly reviewed in its aspect as a discipline applied in engineering design. The second part of the lecture is on recent developments in the mathematical analysis of basic queueing models with a two-dimensional state space.
openaire +1 more source
2011
Queuing theory models provide these benefits with at least two types of associated costs. First, users need to make a limiting set of assumptions about arrivals and service distributions. These assumptions might not apply to any reasonable approximation in some cases of interest. Making them could lead to inadvisable recommendations.
openaire +1 more source
Queuing theory models provide these benefits with at least two types of associated costs. First, users need to make a limiting set of assumptions about arrivals and service distributions. These assumptions might not apply to any reasonable approximation in some cases of interest. Making them could lead to inadvisable recommendations.
openaire +1 more source
Fundamentals of Queueing Theory.
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (General), 1975R. Syski, D. Gross, C. M. Harris
openaire +1 more source
1981
Queueing theory is a generic term for mathematical structures inspired by and descriptive of service systems with random features such as random delay, randomly arriving customers, etc.† Such systems can be classified in two ways: according to the structure and postulates which characterize the operation, on the one hand, and according to the random ...
openaire +1 more source
Queueing theory is a generic term for mathematical structures inspired by and descriptive of service systems with random features such as random delay, randomly arriving customers, etc.† Such systems can be classified in two ways: according to the structure and postulates which characterize the operation, on the one hand, and according to the random ...
openaire +1 more source

