In queueing theory, Kendall's notation (or sometimes Kendall notation) is the standard system used to describe and classify the queueing model that a queueing system corresponds to. First suggested by D. G. Kendall in 1953 as a three-factor A/B/C notation system for characterising queues, it has since been extended to include K and D by Lee and N by Taha.
The notation now appears in most standard reference work about queueing theory, e.g. Algorithmic Analysis of Queues
Read more about Kendall's Notation: Notation
Famous quotes containing the word kendall:
“It was always the work that was the gyroscope in my life. I dont know who could have lived with me. As an architect youre absolutely devoured. A womans cast in a lot of roles and a man isnt. I couldnt be an architect and be a wife and mother.”
—Eleanore Kendall Pettersen (b. 1916)