The speed of travel of a given amount of data from one place to another.
the speed (in bits per second) at which data can be transferred between two computers once transmission has begun
The average flow per unit time of information from source to destination. The rate may be measured in terms of bits, bytes, blocks, frames, packets, etc., per second, minute, hour, etc.
The rate at which two modems can exchange data. data transfer time The time required to transfer data to primary memory.
The rate that digital data is transferred from one point to another, expressed in bits per second or bytes per second. Data Transfer Rate to Disk: The internal disk transfer rate in Mbits per second. Data Transfer Rate from the Buffer to the Host: Based on the transfer of buffered data in MB per second.
The average number of bits, characters, or blocks per unit of time transferred from a data source to a data sink.
The data transfer rate is commonly used to measure how fast data is transferred ...
The speed at which information can be transferred to or from a RAID, usually measured in Megabytes per second (Mb/S). Many factors affect data transfer, including interface (SCSI vs. Fibre), speed of hard drives, and much more. Additionally, read and write speeds under different operations may vary greatly.
The rate at which data are read/written from/to secondary storage to RAM.
(DTR) The speed at which bits of data are sent. For example, this could describe the rate at which the bits of information are read from the disk and sent to the drive's controller (internal rate), or characterize data exchange between the controller and PC's CPU (external rate).
Speed at which bits are sent. In a disk storage system, the communication between CPU and controller, plus controller and the disk drive. Typical units are bits per second (BPS), or bytes per second. See also BPS, baud.
The speed with which data can be read from a DVD/CD-ROM drive. Originally the standard speed was 1x which was 150 kilobytes per second, then it doubled to dual speed; 2x = 300 kb/second; 4x = 600kb/s (etc.); 12x = 1.8 mb/s; 16x = 2.4 mb/s. Today our cd drives are running at speed of 50x and up.
Measurement in megabits or megabytes per second of how fast data can move from one device to another. 1 Mbps equals 1,000,000 bits per second and 1 MBps equals 1,000,000 bytes per second.
The speed at which data can be read from a CD-ROM drive. The first transfer rate was 150kilobytes per second. Manufacturers are now making drives that transfer data as high as 32x (32 times 150kbps).
The average number of bits per unit of time passing in a data transaction.
The speed at which data is transferred. Measured in kilobytes per second for a CD-ROM drive, in bits per second for a modem, and in megabytes per second for a hard drive.
Generally associated with high speed serial data transfer systems and measured in gigabits per second (Gbit/sec).
The speed at which a tape drive can write digital data to a data cartridge. Transfer rates are usually measured in megabytes per minute and represent the highest sustainable speed at which the drive is able to operate.
The speed at which a circuit or communications line can transfer information, usually measured in bits per second (bps).
The number of kilobytes of information that can be transferred each second from the CD-ROM disc or other peripheral to the host computer. A single-speed CD-ROM drive has a data transfer rate of 150 K/sec; a quad-speed drive has 600 K/sec.
Data transfer rate is the speed at which data can be read from the hard disk and delivered to the processor.
The transfer rate of the storeage media itself. VCD transfer rate is 1.2MB.
The amount of data per unit time moved through a channel or I/O bus in the course of execution of an I/O load. For disk system I/O, data transfer capacity is usually expressed in Mbytes/second (millions of bytes per second.) cf. data transfer capacity
The speed with which data can be read from a CD ROM drive. 150 kilobytes per second was the original standard rate; 2x = 300 kb/second; 4x = 600kb/s (etc.); 12x = 1.8 mb/s; 16x = 2.4 mb/s.
The number of characters that can be transferred from an RFID tag to a reader within a given time. Baud rates are also used to quantify how fast readers can read the information on the RFID tag. This differs from read rate, which refers to how many tags can be read within a given period of time.
the speed at which data is transferred between a host and a data recording device ... usually noted in bytes/sec or MB/minute
the rate or speed at which information is written to tape, typically expressed in MB/minute or bytes/second
The speed at which a disk drive can transfer information from the drive to the processor, usually measured in megabits or megabytes per second. For example, a SCSI drive can reach a transfer rate of ... more
A CD-DA reader can transfer data at a rate of 150 kb per second. A CD-ROM 12x reader transfers at 1.8 Mb per second.
In telecommunications, data transfer rate or just transfer rate is the average number of bits, characters, or blocks per unit time passing between equipment in a data transmission system.