isochronous

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ἴσος (ísos, equal) + Ancient Greek χρόνος (khrónos) + -ous

Adjective

isochronous (not comparable)

  1. happening at regular intervals
  2. happening at the same time; isochronal
  3. (computing) of or pertaining to the use of clocks derived from the same clock reference
    Their entire national telephone network is isochronous, with a clock distribution tree radiating from a single, protected cesium reference clock.
  4. (computing) of or pertaining to data associated with time sensitive application
    These packets belong to an isochronous voice application and need priority handling.

Synonyms

See also

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