Pipeline (disambiguation) explained
Pipeline is a system for the long-distance transportation of a liquid or gas.
It may also refer to:
Electronics, computers and computing
- Pipeline (computing), a chain of data-processing stages or a CPU optimization found on
- Instruction pipelining, a technique for implementing instruction-level parallelism within a single processor
- Pipeline (software), a chain of data-processing processes or other software entities
- Pipeline (Unix), a set of process chained by their standard streams
- XML pipeline, a connection of XML transformations
- CMS Pipelines, an improvement on UNIX piping. Allows multiple streams, moves pointers rather than data, is predictable.
- Graphics pipeline, the method of rasterization-based rendering as supported by graphics hardware
- Pipelining (DSP implementation), a transformation for optimizing digital circuit
- Telestream pipeline, a video capture and playout hardware device
Physical infrastructure
Business
- Art pipeline, process of creating and implementing art for a particular project, most commonly associated with the creative process for developing video games.
- Sales pipeline, a visualisation of the sales process of a company
Places
In arts and entertainment
Games
- Pipeline (game), a 1988 computer game for the BBC Micro and Acorn Electron
- Pipeline (board game), winner of Games Magazine's 1992 Game of the Year award
- Mario Bros., commonly referred to as Pipeline
Literature
- Pipeline (comics), a character from Marvel Comics with the ability to teleport himself and others
- Pipeline (play), a 2017 play written by Dominique Morisseau
Music
Other uses in arts and entertainment
Roller coasters
Other uses
- The Pipeline, a former internet service provider
- Alt-right pipeline, a proposed conceptual model for the process of far-right radicalization on social media
- Beep line, an improvised telephone chat line hosted over busy signals
- Drug pipeline, the drugs a pharmaceutical company has in development
- School-to-prison pipeline, a pattern in the U.S., described by scholars and reform activists, of pushing disadvantaged students out of school and into the criminal justice system
See also