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BackhaulThe process of a transportation vehicle returning from the original destination point to the point of origin. The 1980 Motor Carrier Act deregulated interstate commercial trucking, thereby allowing ca [..]
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BackhaulA backhaul is the terrestrial link between an earth station and a switching or data center.
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BackhaulA transaction that results in the transportation of gas in a direction opposite of the aggregate physical flow of gas in the pipeline. This is typically achieved when the transporting pipeline redeliv [..]
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BackhaulWhen a truck transports a load from A to B, the trucking company will seek a commercial load for the return journey from B to A. This is known as the backhaul and underpins competitive pricing. The [..]
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BackhaulIn wireless networks, the connection from an individual base station (tower) to the central network (backbone). Typical backhaul connections are wired high-speed data connections (T1 line, etc.), but [..]
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Backhaul(1) Backbone telecommunications pathways used for transporting traffic from central site(s) to distribution sites (viz. local exchanges) to end users, and vice versa. (2) One-to-one uplink feeds to satellite for sending broadcast TV signals to the studio.
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Backhaul1. The practice of routing telecommunications traffic beyond its intended destination, and then back to the intended destination, usually for the purpose of taking advantage of tariffs or prices that are lower than those afforded by direct routing. 2. In security, to bring a call that has been routed along a particular path (usually via satellite) [..]
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Backhaul(1) In wireless network technology, to transmit voice and data traffic from a cell site to a switch, i.e., from a remote site to a central site. (2) In satellite technology, to transmit data to a poin [..]
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BackhaulThe terrestrial link between an earth station and a switching or data center.
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BackhaulA transportation practice used to defray costs by picking up products from a manufacturer after delivering products to a store.
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BackhaulTo haul a shipment back over part of a route it has traveled.
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BackhaulTransportation term that describes the activity of picking up, transporting, and delivering a new load on a return trip from delivering another load (known as the fronthaul, though the term fronthaul [..]
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BackhaulThe delivery by a pipeline of gas upstream from its point of receipt. While all of the gas traditionally physically flows downstream, the effect of the transaction is to bring the downstream producer [..]
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BackhaulA freight movement in a direction (or lane) of secondary importance or light demand. Backhauls are preferable to deadheads by transportation companies, since revenue is generated. In order to entice s [..]
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BackhaulIntermediate links (network) between the core network (backbone network) and the small subnetworks at the "edge" of the entire hierarchical network (e.g. FTTH, DSL, DAS, RRH, etc.)
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BackhaulA general term for the segment of a network between the core and the edge. An example: the connection from a community network hub in a small town to a carrier hotel where it connects to the Internet [..]
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BackhaulThe term backhaul signifies the return trip made, as by a truck or cargo ship, after delivering a load to a specified destination. Backhaul is a deviation to move cargo on the return leg of a voyage. [..]
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Backhaulbackhaul (in telecommunications) refers to sending data over long distances to the global network backbone/internet. Backhaul generally refers to the commercial wholesale bandwidth side of the network [..]
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BackhaulIn a hierarchical telecommunications network the backhaul portion of the network comprises the intermediate links between the core network, or backbone, of the network and the small sub-networks at th [..]
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Backhaul Backhaul: the process of sending locally aggregated traffic gathered at a local level onto a backbone network.
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BackhaulIn the context of wireless communications, backhaul refers to the transportation of data or voice between the wireless access points to the public data or telephony network, or the Internet in case of [..]
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BackhaulTo haul a shipment back over part of a route that it has already traveled; return movement of cargo, usually opposite from the direction of its primary cargo destination.
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BackhaulA vehicle's return movement from original destination to original origin.
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BackhaulTo haul a shipment back over part of a route that it has already traveled; return movement of cargo, usually opposite from the direction of its primary cargo destination.
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Backhaul To haul a shipment back over part of a route which it has already traveled; a marine transportation carrier’s return movement of cargo, usually opposite from the direction of its primary cargo distri [..]
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Backhaul(1) Backbone telecommunications pathways used for transporting traffic from central site(s) to distribution sites (viz. local exchanges) to end users, and vice versa. (2) One-to-one uplink feeds to satellite for sending broadcast TV signals to the studio.
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BackhaulA deviation to move cargo on the return leg of a voyage for the purpose of minimizing ballast mileage and thereby reducing transportation costs.
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BackhaulA "paper transport" of natural gas by displacement against the flow on a single pipeline, so that the natural gas is redelivered upstream of its point of receipt. See also DISPLACEMENT.
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BackhaulMovement of gas from a Point of Receipt to a Point of Delivery such that the contractual direction of movement on the mainline is at all times and at all points along the path in a direction opposite to the design flow of gas in the pipeline.
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BackhaulThe process of a transportation vehicle returning from the original destination point to the point of origin. The 1980 Motor Carrier Act deregulated interstate commercial trucking and thereby allowed [..]
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BackhaulThe portion of a transport trip, typically associated with trucking, that is incurred when returning a vehicle to its point of origin. Ideally the carrier will find some sort of freight to carry back, if the trip is empty it is called deadhead. Backsourcing
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Backhaul A transportation practice used to defray costs by picking up products from a manufacturer after delivering products to a store.backroom:
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BackhaulThe return movement of a vehicle from its original destination to its original point of origin, especially when carrying goods back over all or part of the same route.
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BackhaulThe process of a transportation vehicle (typically a truck) returning from the original destination to its point of origin with a non-paying load (called backload) and/or paying load (called payload). [..]
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BackhaulA transaction that results in natural gas being transported in the opposite direction of the physical flow of a transportation system. This is usually achieved by redelivering the gas at a point upstream to the point of receipt.
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