2. Computers To transfer (data) to a peripheral device.
3. Informal To get rid of and pass on to another: "U.S. farmers and ranchers were forced to look to foreign customers to offload their surpluses"(Paul Roberts).
Release date- 25072019 - POWIDZ AIR BASE, Poland - With aircraft engines roaring, Airmen are pushed by the wind and exhaust as they communicate through hand signals while performing a combat offload at the end of the taxiway.
'This incident caused a delay of nearly three hours in departure,' he said, adding that the PIA considered safety as its foremost priority and as per standard operating procedure it had to offload nearly 50 passengers joining from Beijing along with their luggage.
binary and partial computation offloading, where binary offloading requires a task to be executed as a whole either locally at the mobile device or remotely at the edge server and partial offloading allows a task to be partitioned into two parts with one executed locally and the other offloaded for edge execution[12].
The move sparked jitters throughout the sector, as Mr Morgan's stake sale also follows a move by Tony Pidgley, the founder of housebuilder Berkeley Group, to offload his holding worth PS26.8m last week.
Computation Offloading based on various task execution models are available for smart devices as follows: i) execute tasks locally, ii) offload to the smart-phone, iii) offload to the cloud via smart-phone and iv) offload to the cloud via Wireless access point.
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.