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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Drift_(telecommunication)
rdfs:label
Drift (telecommunication)
rdfs:comment
In telecommunication, a drift is a comparatively long-term change in an attribute, value, or operational parameter of a system or equipment. The drift should be characterized, such as "diurnal frequency drift" and "output level drift." Drift is usually undesirable and unidirectional, but may be bidirectional, cyclic, or of such long-term duration and low excursion rate as to be negligible.
dcterms:subject
dbc:Synchronization
dbo:wikiPageID
2583906
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
963651401
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
n6:IP dbr:Audio_streaming dbr:System dbc:Synchronization dbr:Frequency_drift dbr:Telecommunication dbr:Glitch dbr:Jitter dbr:Clock_drift dbr:Master_clock
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freebase:m.07ppvv wikidata:Q1258945 n16:Hfau
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dbt:Reflist dbt:Telecomm-stub
dbo:abstract
In telecommunication, a drift is a comparatively long-term change in an attribute, value, or operational parameter of a system or equipment. The drift should be characterized, such as "diurnal frequency drift" and "output level drift." Drift is usually undesirable and unidirectional, but may be bidirectional, cyclic, or of such long-term duration and low excursion rate as to be negligible. Drift is also common in pseudo-synchronised streaming applications, such as low-latency audio streaming over TCP/IP. Normally both ends of a streaming connection would stay in-sync with a master clock but TCP/IP does not provide this 'master clock' mechanism. Therefore, applications running fixed clocks will drift apart over time and glitches will occur. This is usually fixed by controlling jitter or drift, by slightly altering the clock speed at one end of the connection.
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wikipedia-en:Drift_(telecommunication)?oldid=963651401&ns=0
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1105
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wikipedia-en:Drift_(telecommunication)