latency
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Latency \La"ten*cy\, n. [See {Latent}.]
1. The state or quality of being latent.
[1913 Webster]
To simplify the discussion, I shall distinguish
three degrees of this latency. --Sir W.
Hamilton.
[1913 Webster]
2. The time between a stimulus the appearance of the
response; the time between any causal action and the first
appearance of the effect. Called also {latent period}.
[PJC]
3. Hence: (Med.) The time between exposure to a carcinogen or
other disease-causing agent and the appearance of the
consequent disease.
[PJC]
from
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
latency
<communications> 1. The time it takes for a {packet} to cross
a network connection, from sender to receiver.
2. The period of time that a frame is held by a network device
before it is forwarded.
Two of the most important parameters of a communications
channel are its latency, which should be low, and its
{bandwidth}, which should be high. Latency is particularly
important for a {synchronous} {protocol} where each packet
must be acknowledged before the next can be transmitted.
(2000-02-27)
from
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
37 Moby Thesaurus words for "latency":
abeyance, apathy, catalepsy, catatonia, cold storage, deadliness,
deathliness, delitescence, doldrums, dormancy, entropy,
indifference, indolence, inertia, inertness, intermission,
interruption, languor, latent content, latent meaningfulness,
latentness, lotus-eating, passiveness, passivity, possibility,
potentiality, quiescence, quiescency, stagnancy, stagnation,
stasis, suspense, suspension, torpor, vegetation, virtuality,
vis inertiae
[email protected]