Concurrent User

In computer science, the number of concurrent users for a resource in a location, with the location being a computing network or a single computer, refers to the total number of people using the resource at the same time. The resource can, for example, be a computer program, a file, or the computer as a whole. A computer operating system that allows several users to access a resource on the computer at the same time is a multiuser multitasking operating system, historically called a time-sharing operating system. The capacity of a system can also be measured in terms of maximum concurrent users, at which point system performance begins to degrade noticably. Commercial vendors often license a software product by means of a concurrent users restriction. This allows a fixed number of users access to the product at a given time, and is in contrast with an unlimited use license.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
new zealand birds
john paul young
ink brush
pierre d'ailly
british and foreign bible society
mikheil tsereteli
liverpool protestant party
irish rebel music
steiner
edward hincks
smssend
cholas
genietexter
the narrative of arthur gordon pym of nantucket
genital tattooing
boeing x 40
hessia
mercury sms sending program
protestant unionist party
bischofsheim (mainspitze)
invertible sheaf
pearling
pier gerlofs donia
rheinhessen
limbourg brothers
top ryde, new south wales
luminous flux
carcass island
ryde, new south wales
collar (bdsm)
ss n 19 missile
mosix
blog for america
finger condom
sibayak
coat of arms of hainaut
directional selection
roland koch
clements markham
conrad baars
berastagi
cholecystectomy
first baseman
ian vine