time need to prepare a vessel or ship for a return trip.
Titanic, in her time, was the largest ship in the world.
Carpathia did. It was 58 miles away at the time, so it couldn't get there in time to rescue everyone, but it did respond to distress calls and alter its course to find the survivors. Other ships either were even farther away, or did not have their ship's radios turned on (there was no law at the time requiring a ship's radio to be on past midnight). It was simply a case of bad luck.
Because it was a giant ship with many luxuries, such as a swimming pool, and great food, and paintings. It also lacked a searchlight to see at night, binoculars for the lookouts, and enough lifeboats for everyone on board, as well as drills in case of a disaster so that people knew what to do just in case an accident happened.
the titanic was thought to be the ship of dreams
The Olympic was the sister ship of the Titanic.
It's the time it takes to prepare something (such as a cargo ship) for the return trip.It can also refer to the total time it takes to process and deliver an order, especially in the case where you're shipping something back to have it repaired or replaced.
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No, maximising throughput does not necessarily mean maximising turnaround time. Throughput is a measure of how many operations can be performed in a period of time. Turnaround is a measure of how long it takes to perform an operation. If you optimize latency and/or overhead, you can increase throughput and decrease turnaround time. On the other hand, if you create parallel processing, you can increase throughput without decreasing turnaround.
Turnaround time is the interval between the submission of a job and its completion. Response time is the interval between submission of a request, and the first response to that request.
time lab test results is done
6-12 minutes
the time required from time you receive a work until you complete it
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A customer submits their claim form with estimates, photos, invoices etc. on a certain date. After processing, at a later date the claim is settled. The time difference between receiving and settling the claim is the turnaround time.
Example: Turnaround Time: P1 : 24, P2 : 27, P3 : 30 - Average TT: (24 + 27 + 30)/3 = 27
Athletes will sometimes turn around after a race in order to face the crowd and accept applause. This isn't the case every time however, such as when an athlete loses the race.
The Turnaround was created on 1963-03-07.