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  2. Schedule (project management) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schedule_(project_management)

    In project management, a schedule is a listing of a project 's milestones, activities, and deliverables. Usually dependencies and resources are defined for each task, then start and finish dates are estimated from the resource allocation, budget, task duration, and scheduled events. A schedule is commonly used in the project planning and ...

  3. Stochastic scheduling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stochastic_scheduling

    Introduction. The objective of the stochastic scheduling problems can be regular objectives such as minimizing the total flowtime, the makespan, or the total tardiness cost of missing the due dates; or can be irregular objectives such as minimizing both earliness and tardiness costs of completing the jobs, or the total cost of scheduling tasks under likely arrival of a disastrous event such as ...

  4. Interval scheduling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_scheduling

    Interval scheduling. Interval scheduling is a class of problems in computer science, particularly in the area of algorithm design. The problems consider a set of tasks. Each task is represented by an interval describing the time in which it needs to be processed by some machine (or, equivalently, scheduled on some resource).

  5. Parallel task scheduling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_task_scheduling

    Parallel task scheduling (also called parallel job scheduling [1] [2] or parallel processing scheduling [3]) is an optimization problem in computer science and operations research. It is a variant of optimal job scheduling. In a general job scheduling problem, we are given n jobs J1 , J2 , ..., Jn of varying processing times, which need to be ...

  6. Gain scheduling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gain_scheduling

    Gain scheduling. In control theory, gain scheduling is an approach to control of nonlinear systems that uses a family of linear controllers, each of which provides satisfactory control for a different operating point of the system. One or more observable variables, called the scheduling variables, are used to determine what operating region the ...

  7. I/O scheduling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I/O_scheduling

    I/O scheduling. The position of I/O schedulers (center) within various layers of the Linux kernel 's storage stack. [1] Input/output ( I/O) scheduling is the method that computer operating systems use to decide in which order I/O operations will be submitted to storage volumes. I/O scheduling is sometimes called disk scheduling .

  8. Weighted fair queueing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weighted_fair_queueing

    Weighted fair queueing ( WFQ) is a network scheduling algorithm. WFQ is both a packet-based implementation of the generalized processor sharing (GPS) policy, and a natural extension of fair queuing (FQ). Whereas FQ shares the link's capacity in equal subparts, WFQ allows schedulers to specify, for each flow, which fraction of the capacity will ...

  9. Major League Baseball schedule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_League_Baseball_schedule

    The Major League Baseball (MLB) season schedule consists of 162 games for each of the 30 teams in the American League (AL) and National League (NL), played over approximately six months – a total of 2,430 games, plus the postseason. The regular season runs from late March/early April to late September/early October, followed by the postseason ...

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