| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Neuro-muscular Transmission (Neuromuscular transmission) hertsholistichealth.co.uk | Counting Meditation Instruction, counting back from 10, meditation for... yogateacher.com | KERN Digital Counting Scales, Parts Counting – Quality and Value tovatech.com | Full Blood Count (FBC, Full Blood Test or Complete Blood Count, CBC) - virtualgastrocentre.com |
The ETX metric, or Expected Transmission Count, is a measure of the quality of a path between two nodes in a wireless packet data network. It is used extensively in mesh networking algorithms. [edit] HistoryDouglas S.J. De Couto was the first to describe ETX in his 2004 doctoral dissertation at MIT.[1] Subsequently, it has been implemented in RoofNet/Meraki and OLSR mesh networking protocols, among others. [edit] DetailsETX is the number of expected transmissions of a packet necessary for it to be received without error at its destination. This number varies from one to infinity. An ETX of one indicates a perfect transmission medium, where an ETX of infinity represents a completely non-functional link. Because ETX is an expected transmission count for a future event, as opposed to an actual count of a past event, it represents a probability, and is therefore a real number, and not an integer. For example, if it took 1898 transmissions to transfer 1024 packets without error, the ETX on the link is 1898/1024, or approximately 1.85. Due to varying characteristics of the transmission medium, the number may vary widely. [edit] References
|
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |