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Waiting-line auction for WiFi pricing

Proceedings of the 2008 ACM CoNEXT Conference on - CONEXT '08, 2008
We model the relationship between a WLAN access point (AP) and a paying mobile station (MS) as a waiting-line auction [1] in which clients bids for transmission using the length of Contention Window (CW) as bid signals. The shorter CW is, the higher the access probability is, thus the higher pay to AP.
Tao Han, Liang Ma, Yuanan Liu
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Waiting in Line

International Journal of Servant-Leadership, 2011
Having the only choice to wait in line, I spent five hours at water tap in a long line under a hot sun, so that I can get water. When there is no water taps in a village, rivers is the only hope. What happens when rivers also dry at same time?
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Waiting Lines with Heterogeneous Servers

Operations Research, 1960
A “multiple-booth” server system with nonhomogeneous servers is analyzed under the assumption of Poisson distributed arrivals and exponential service time with different individual mean service rates for each server. Explicit expressions for the state probabilities are obtained in closed form under “steady-state” conditions and the expected length of ...
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Wait time prediction

Proceedings of the 2013 ACM conference on Pervasive and ubiquitous computing adjunct publication, 2013
One of the challenges of organizations providing services to the public is the effective resource allocation. Many service providers such as hospitals, city halls or department of motor vehicles suffer from a service demand, which is unevenly distributed over the day. In this work, we evaluate techniques for predicting the service demand.
Ye Zhang, Le T. Nguyen, Joy Zhang
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Waiting Lines and Waiting Times

2017
This chapter seeks to determine if can we reduce the time it takes to deliver a public health or healthcare service, such as the long waiting times in emergency departments, long waiting lists for under-supported services such as drug rehabilitation, and vast periods of uncertainty for scarce commodities such as organ transplants.
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Waiting Line Models

2010
Waiting line or queuing systems are pervasive. Many of us remember the long lineups in front of stores in the Soviet Union and Vietnam, and we have all experienced lineups in banks and supermarkets, but there are many more instances with waiting lines: think, for instance, about traffic lights, where drivers line up and wait, files that wait for ...
H. A. Eiselt, Carl-Louis Sandblom
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A Waiting Line Model:

Journal of College & University Foodservice, 1992
A model using wailing the principles was developed to assist with foodservice facilities design. The number of seals needed is calculated. Using values for area per seat previously published the size of the dining area can then be determined. The number of seats needed is dependent upon the meal patterns served, arrival rates of customers, turnover ...
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Network of waiting lines

Optimization, 1972
This paper studies the time independent solution of a queueing system wherein units demanding one, two or three service phases arrive with a POISSON POISSON stream at the first channel of the system of three service channels S 1, S 2 and S 3. The server S, attends to units which on being serviced may leave the system (those having only one service ...
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Duopoly pricing and waiting lines

European Economic Review, 1978
Abstract The paper deals with a model of duopoly pricing in the context of firms providing services to consumers. Each of the firms has a waiting line of customers arriving randomly. The service provided by both firms is identical and the service time of both firms is assumed to obey the same distribution.
David Levhari, Israel Luski
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The Impact of Waiting in Line on Consumers

International Journal of Bank Marketing, 1993
Since consumers feel that time is becoming an increasingly scarcer resource, service organizations are also becoming increasingly sensitive to the economical and psychological costs which they impose on their clients in waiting lines. Reports a study aimed at examining the relations between two variables which are controllable by banks (i.e.
Jean‐Charles Chebat   +1 more
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