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gepufferte

Gepufferte is the past participle adjective form of the German verb puffern, meaning to buffer. It is used to describe data, signals, or resources that have been temporarily stored to absorb timing differences between producers and consumers or to smooth out bursts in data flow. The term is common in technical German, especially in computing, networking, audio, and video contexts.

Etymology and usage notes: The noun Puffer (buffer) and the verb puffern are borrowed into German from

In computing and digital systems, gepufferte data are stored temporarily to accommodate speed differences between components,

Applications and contexts: Gepufferte data are encountered in video and audio streaming, real-time communication, network traffic

See also: Buffering, Puffer (Computing), Puffern (the verb), buffering techniques.

English
terminology.
Gepufferte
items
are
typically
located
in
a
buffer,
a
memory
region
or
queue
that
holds
information
briefly
before
it
is
processed
or
transmitted.
The
form
gepufferte
is
used
attributively
(as
in
gepufferte
Daten)
and
predicatively
in
technical
writing.
compensate
for
jitter,
and
prevent
underflow
or
overflow.
Buffers
can
be
implemented
as
ring
buffers,
FIFO
queues,
or
double
buffers,
and
they
often
involve
trade-offs
between
latency
and
smoothness
of
data
delivery.
management,
disk
I/O,
and
embedded
systems.
Buffering
helps
maintain
steady
throughput,
reduces
artifacts,
and
allows
asynchronous
components
to
work
together
despite
varying
processing
times
or
network
conditions.