946 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
946 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
GLOSSARY
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Last Change 11/6/94.
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A20
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(Address line 20) The 80286 and higher CPUs allow addresses in
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real mode to extend slightly beyond the one megabyte mark, which causes
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an incompatibility with some older programs which expect such addresses
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to wrap back to the beginning of the address space. For complete
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compatibility with the 8088, newer machines thus contain circuitry
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which permits the twenty-first address line (A20) to be disabled. The
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CPU then effectively has only twenty address lines in real mode, just
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as the 8088 does, and addresses which would extend beyond the one
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megabyte mark wrap to the beginning of the address space. See also
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High Memory Area, Real Mode.
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ABIOS
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(Advanced BIOS) The IBM XT/286 and PS/2 models with 80286 or
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higher processors contain two separate BIOSes. The ABIOS is a
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protected-mode BIOS which is used by OS/2. For machines without an
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ABIOS, such as the IBM AT, OS/2 loads the equivalent of the ABIOS from
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disk. see also CBIOS
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API
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(Application Program[ming] Interface) The defined set of calls
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which a program may make to interact with or request services of the
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operating system or environment under which it is running. Because the
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inputs and outputs of the calls are well-defined, a program using the
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API can continue using the identical calls even if the internal
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organization of the program providing the API changes.
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APL
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(A Programming Language) An interactive, mathematically-
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oriented language which is well-suited to manipulating matrices.
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Originally using greek letters and numerous special symbols, thus
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requiring a special display, versions are now available which use
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keywords in place of the special symbols.
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ASCIZ
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A NUL-terminated ASCII string. The ASCIZ string "ABC" consists
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of the four bytes 41h, 42h, 43h, and 00h. Unless otherwise specified,
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maximum lengths given in the interrupt list do not include the
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terminating NUL.
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AVATAR
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(Advanced Video Attribute Terminal Assembler and Recreator) A
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set of control codes which may be used to affect the output of
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characters to the screen on systems equipped with an appropriate
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driver. Similar in intent to ANSI sequences, AVATAR has shorter
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command sequences and provides additional PC-specific functionality.
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AVATAR is primarily used by the Opus and Maximus bulletin board systems
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(it was designed by one of the developers of the Opus system).
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BASIC
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(Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code) A
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programming language originally designed as a means of teaching
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FORTRAN. There are many variations of BASIC with differing
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capabilities; the majority are interpreted but compiled BASIC is
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becoming more popular. All genuine IBM personal computers (including
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the latest PS/2 models) come equipped with a cassette-based BASIC
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interpreter in ROM.
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BCD
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(Binary Coded Decimal) A method of data storage where two
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decimal digits are stored in each byte, one in the upper four bits and
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the other in the lower four bits. Since only the values 0 through 9
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are used in each half of a byte, BCD values can be read as decimal
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numbers on a hexadecimal display of memory or a file.
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Big-Endian
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One of the two major ways of organizing multi-byte numeric
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values in memory. A big-endian layout places the most significant byte
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of the value in the lowest (first) memory location, i.e. 12345678h is
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stored as 12h 34h 56h 78h. Motorola processors are big-endian. Compare
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Little-Endian.
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BIOS
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(Basic Input/Output System) A set of standardized calls giving
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low-level access to the hardware. The BIOS is the lowest software
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layer above the actual hardware and serves to insulate programs (and
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operating systems) which use it from the details of accessing the
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hardware directly.
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BIOS Parameter Block
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The BIOS Parameter Block stores the low-level layout of a
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drive. See also INT 21h Function 53h.
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Boot
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To start up the computer or operating system. The term "boot"
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is a contraction of "bootstrap", which in turn comes from the
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expression "to lift oneself by one's boot straps." The ROM BIOS on IBM
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PCs and compatibles reads in the first sector of the disk, which
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contains a short (less than 500 bytes) program that reads in a portion
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of the operating system, which in turn reads in the remainder of the
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operating system.
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Boot Drive
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The disk drive from which the operating system was booted. See
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also Boot.
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BPB
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see BIOS Parameter Block
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Breakpoint
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When debugging, a memory location which when accessed causes a
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break in the normal flow of execution and the invocation of the
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debugger. Used to let a program run at full speed until a certain
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instruction is reached or (less frequently) a particular data item is
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accessed or changed.
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Cache
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Caching is a method of increasing performance by keeping
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frequently-used data in a location which is more quickly accessed. The
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most common caches are disk caches (store disk sectors in RAM) and RAM
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caches (store portions of main memory in special high-speed RAM which
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may be accessed as fast as the CPU is capable of accessing memory).
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See also Delayed Write, Write-Through.
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Callback
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A call to a specified function made by the operating system or
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operating environment when a request (usually an asynchronous request)
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completes. This permits the calling program to continue operating while
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the request is processed yet still be aware of its completion
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immediately without the need to constantly poll the request's status.
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See also Callout.
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Callout
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A call made by the operating system, operating environment, or
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an application program on various events, which may be intercepted by
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other software which is interested in the current state of the system.
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See also Callback, External Device Interface.
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CAS
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see Communicating Applications Specification
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CBIOS
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(Compatibility BIOS) The IBM XT/286 and PS/2 models with 80286
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or higher processors contain two separate BIOSes. The CBIOS is a
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real-mode BIOS which is compatible with the earlier products in the IBM
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PC family and PS/2 models with 8086 processors. See also ABIOS.
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CDS
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see Current Directory Structure
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CGA
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(Color/Graphics Adapter) One of the two video display boards
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introduced together with the original IBM PC. See also HGC, MDA.
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Clock Tick
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1/18.2 second, or approximately 55 milliseconds. This is the
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rate at which the IBM PC's system clock is updated.
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CMOS
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(Complementary Metal-Oxide-Silicon) A type of integrated
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circuit design known for its low power consumption.
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CMOS RAM
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A small amount (typically 64 or 128 bytes) of memory in the system's
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real-time clock chip that is preserved by the clock's battery and is used for
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storing configuration information. See also Real-Time Clock.
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Communicating Applications Specification
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DCA and Intel's standard programmatic interface for sending and
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receiving FAXes via any of a number of internal FAX boards.
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CP/M
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(Control Program for Microcomputers) An early operating system
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for micros based on the 8-bit Intel 8080 CPU (and later the compatible
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8085 and Zilog Z80 CPUs). MSDOS version 1.0 was essentially a clone of
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CP/M for the Intel 8086.
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CP/M-86
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One of the three operating systems offered by IBM for its
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original PC (the other two were MSDOS and the UCSD p-System). It has
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since evolved into DR-DOS version 6.
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CPU
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(Central Processing Unit) The microprocessor which executes
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programs on your computer.
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Current Directory Structure
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The data record used by DOS to keep track of the current
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directory on a drive; whether the drive is valid, network, SUBSTituted,
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or JOINed; and other pertinent information. See also INT 21h Function
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52h.
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Cylinder
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The set of concentric tracks of data located at the same
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position on each data-bearing surface of the disk. A double-sided
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floppy will contain two tracks per cylinder.
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DAC
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(Digital-to-Analog Converter) A hardware device (in its simplest
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form, nothing more than a set of interconnected resistors) which converts
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a digital number into an analog signal whose voltage is proportional to
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the value of the digital number. VGA and later color video boards use
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DACs to convert color values into the analog signals sent to the display;
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sound boards normally use DACs as well.
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DCC
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(Display Combination Code) A number which indicates both the
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type of display adapter board and the type of monitor attached to the
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video board.
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Delayed Write
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A form of caching in which control is returned before the data is
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actually written to the storage media. See also Cache, Write-Through.
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Device Driver
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An interface module between the device-independent portions of
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the operating system and an actual hardware device which converts
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device-independent requests into the actual sequence of device
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operations to perform the requested action. IO.SYS contains the
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standard, built-in MSDOS device drivers such as CON, COM1, AUX, PRN,
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etc. See also INT 21h Function 52h and INT 2Fh Function 0802h.
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Device Driver Request Header
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The data structure passed to a device driver which contains the
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command to be executed, its parameters, and space for a returned status
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and data values. See INT 2Fh Function 0802h.
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DGIS
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(Direct Graphics Interface Standard)
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Direct Memory Access
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A method whereby peripherals may transfer data into or out of
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main memory without the involvement of the CPU.
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Disk Transfer Address
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The Disk Transfer Address indicates where functions which do
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not take an explicit data address will read or store data. Although
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the name implies that only disk accesses use this address, other
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functions use it as well. See INT 21h Function 4Eh for an example of
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the DTA's use.
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DLL
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see Dynamic Link Library
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DMA
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see Direct Memory Access
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DOS Extender
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A program which allows a program to run in protected mode while still
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retaining access to real-mode MSDOS services. See also Protected Mode.
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DOS Parameter List
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The DOS Parameter List is used to pass arguments to SHARE and
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network functions. See also INT 21h Function 5D00h.
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DOS Protected-Mode Interface
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An API which provides basic services for protected-mode programs to
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allocate memory, invoke real-mode software, etc. See also Virtual Control
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Program Interface.
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DPB
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see Drive Paramter Block
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DPL
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see DOS Parameter List
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DPMI
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see DOS Protected-Mode Interface
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DRAM
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(Dynamic Random Access Memory) RAM memory which essentially consists
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of a tiny capacitor for each bit of memory. Since capacitors do not hold
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a charge indefinitely, DRAM must be constantly refreshed to avoid losing
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its contents. Also, the process of reading the contents of the memory are
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destructive, meaning extra time must be spent restoring the contents of
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memory addresses which are accessed, so DRAM is slower than SRAM. See also
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Refresh, SRAM.
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Drive Parameter Block
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The DOS Drive Parameter Block stores the description of the
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media layout for a logical drive, as well as some housekeeping
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information. See also INT 21h Function 1Fh and INT 21h Function 32h.
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DTA
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see Disk Transfer Address
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DWORD
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Doubleword; four bytes. Commonly used to hold a 32-bit
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segment:offset or selector:offset address.
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Dynamic Link Library
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A collection of subroutines which are linked with a program at
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the time it is loaded into memory rather than permanently placed in the
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executable. This has the advantage of allowing a single copy of the
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subroutine library to reside on disk or in memory even when it is used
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by many programs. It also permits all programs using the DLL to be
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updated without recompiling simply by installing a new version of the
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library.
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EGA
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(Enhanced Graphics Adapter) IBM's second color video board for the
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IBM PC family, capable of a maximum resolution of 640x350 pixels in 16
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simultaneous colors of a total of 64 possible colors.
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EISA
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(Enhanced Industry-Standard Architecture) A 32-bit superset of the
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IBM AT's expansion bus (which is now known as the ISA or Industry-Standard
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Architecture bus).
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EMS
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see Expanded Memory Specification
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EOI
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(End of Interrupt) A particular command sent to the interrupt
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controller to indicate that the interrupt has been handled by software
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and that new interrupts of the same or lower priority may now be signalled
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by the interrupt controller.
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ESDI
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(Enhanced Small Device Interface) A disk drive interface type
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which was briefly popular before IDE took over. An ESDI drive can
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transfer data between the drive and controller at 10, 15, or 20
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megabits per second, which is faster than an MFM or RLL controller but
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slower than what is possible with an IDE or SCSI drive. See also IDE.
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Exception
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A signal by the CPU that some error condition has been encountered
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that it can not deal with without a program's intervention. The most commonly
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encountered exceptions on Intel processors are Exceptions 12 and 13, which
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are stack and general problems, respectively. Exception 13 is typically
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caused by a memory access which wraps from the end of a segment back to
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the beginning.
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Expanded Memory Specification
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A specification devised by Lotus, Intel, and Microsoft for
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accessing more than one megabyte of memory by bank-switching additional
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memory into the one megabyte real mode address space.
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Extended BIOS Data Area
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A block of memory, typically the 1K at the top of conventional
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memory, which is used to store additional data for use by the BIOS which
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does not fit into the 256-byte data area at segment 0040h.
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Extended File Control Block
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A DOS File Control Block which has had an additional seven
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bytes prepended to permit control of file attributes (which are stored
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in the appendage). See also FCB.
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Extended Memory
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Memory beyond the one megabyte address which is available only
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on 80286 and higher machines. Except for a small portion (the High
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Memory Area), extended memory is only accessible from protected mode.
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Extended Memory Specification
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A specification devised by Microsoft which allows multiple
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programs to share extended (above 1 megabyte) memory and noncontiguous
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memory above 640K. See also Upper Memory Block.
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External Device Interface
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A series of calls made by the DESQview multitasker on various
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"interesting" events, which may be intercepted by programs which wish to
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keep track of the current system state. See also Callout.
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FAT
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see File Allocation Table
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FCB
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see File Control Block
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File Allocation Table
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A data structure on disk that records which clusters are free,
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which are unusable, and which have been allocated. The clusters occupied
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by a file are linked into a list in the file allocation table, allowing
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DOS to find the contents of the file.
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File Control Block
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A data record in the calling program's address space which is
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used by DOS 1.x functions to record the state of an open file. See
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also INT 21h Function 13h.
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File Handle
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A small positive integer used to identify the previously-opened
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file on which a program wishes to perform an operation.
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Flush
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To force the copying of any data still stored in temporary
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buffers to its final destination.
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FM
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(Frequency Modulation) A method of encoding data as a series of
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magnetic flux reversals on disk or tape, commonly known as single-density
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recording. In frequency modulation, a series of clock pulses are written
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at regular intervals, with one data bit for each clock pulse. See also
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MFM, RLL.
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Formatting
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Preparing a storage medium (usually magnetic media such as a
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disk or tape) for storing data. Low-level or physical formatting
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writes all necessary housekeeping data to enable the storage device
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to read the media and may also initialize the storage units on the
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media to a known state. High-level or logical formatting writes data
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used by the operating system, such as allocation information and
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directories onto media which has already been physically formatted.
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Formatting programs often perform both a low-level and a high-level
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format.
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FOSSIL
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(Fido/Opus/Seadog Standard Interface Layer) A standardized API
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for performing serial I/O, originally used by the Fido and Opus bulletin-
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board software and Seadog bulletin-board mailer, but now in wider use.
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FTP
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(File Transfer Protocol) The standard protocol for copying files
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from one machine to another on a TCP/IP (Internet) network. Also the
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program of the same name with which a user may transfer files.
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Gather-Write
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see Scatter/Gather
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Handle
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A short identifier, usually a small integer or a pointer, for
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some other object which is maintained or controlled by the operating
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system or environment; a particular handle may be valid system-wide or
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may have meaning only for a particular process. See also File Handle.
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HGC
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(Hercules Graphics Controller) A monochrome video adapter capable
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of 720x352 monochrome graphics. The HGC was the first non-IBM video
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adapter for the IBM PC. See also CGA, MDA.
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High Memory Area
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The first 65520 bytes (64K less 16 bytes) of extended memory.
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This area is accessible from real mode on the 80286 and higher
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processors because these processors do not wrap addresses at one
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megabyte as the 8088 and 8086 do. See also A20, INT 2Fh Functions
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4A01h.
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HMA
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see High Memory Area
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Horizontal Retrace
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When a monitor has finished displaying a single scan line, it must
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move it electron beam(s) back to the left edge of the CRT, during which time
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it turns off the beam. On the original CGA (and some early clones), the
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only time one could access the display memory without causing "snow" was
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during the horizontal or vertical retrace periods, as the display adapter
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was not itself accessing the display memory during those times. See also
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Vertical Retrace.
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IDE
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(Integrated Drive Electronics) A type of disk drive interface
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which essentially extends the PC's expansion bus all the way to the
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drive and places the drive controller on the disk drive itself. See
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also ESDI.
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IFS
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see Installable File System
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Installable File System
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An Installable File System which allows non-DOS format media to
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be used by DOS. In most ways, an IFS is very similar to a networked
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drive, although an IFS would typically be local rather than remote.
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See also INT 21h Function 52h.
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IP
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(Internet Protocol) The lower level (transport layer) of the
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TCP/IP protocol suite. See also TCP, TCP/IP.
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IPC
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(Inter-Process Communication) Any one of numerous methods for
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allowing two or more separate processes to exchange data.
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IPX
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(Internetwork Packet Exchange) A low-level layer of Novell's
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NetWare networking software.
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IRQ
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(Interrupt ReQuest) A hardware line connected to the interrupt
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controller chip which signals that a CPU interrupt should be generated.
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ISA
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(Industry-Standard Architecture) The expansion bus used by the
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IBM PC/AT. See also EISA.
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JFT
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see Job File Table
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Job File Table
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The Job File Table (also called Open File Table) stored in a
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program's PSP which translates handles into SFT numbers. See also INT
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21h Function 26h.
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LCD
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(Liquid Crystal Display)
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List of Lists
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An internal DOS table of lists and other tables through which
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most DOS-internal data structures may be reached. See INT 21h Function
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52h.
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Little-Endian
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One of the two major ways of organizing multi-byte numeric
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values in memory. A little-endian layout places the least significant
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byte of the value in the lowest (first) memory location, i.e. 12345678h
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is stored as 78h 56h 34h 12h. Intel processors are little-endian.
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Compare Big-Endian.
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LPT
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Abbreviation for Line PrinTer.
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MCB
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see Memory Control Block
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MCGA
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(Multi-Color Graphics Array) The low-end color adapter offered
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in IBM's early PS/2 series machines.
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MDA
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(Monochrome Display Adapter) A text-only video adapter introduced
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together with the original IBM PC. See also CGA, HGC.
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Memory Control Block
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The data structure containing the length and owner (among other
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things) of a portion of the memory managed by DOS. See INT 21h
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Function 52h.
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MFM
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(Modified Frequency Modulation) A method of encoding data as a
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series of magnetic flux reversals on disk or tape, commonly known as
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double-density recording. In contrast to FM, modified frequency
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modulation omits all clock pulses except those between pairs of zero
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bits. See also FM, RLL.
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Mickey
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The smallest increment of motion a mouse can sense.
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MIDI
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(Musical Instrument Digital Interface) A standardized interface
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for controlling musical instruments with a computer.
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Modem
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(contraction of MOdulator/DEModulator)
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Multitasking
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Any of a number of methods by which multiple programs may
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execute concurrently, with rapid switching between the programs giving
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the appearance that all are executing simultaneously.
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MZ
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The letters M and Z appear in numerous places in DOS (memory
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control blocks, .EXE header, etc.); the conventional explanation is
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that these are the initials of Mark Zbikowski, one of the principal
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architects of MSDOS 2.0.
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NCB
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see Network Control Block
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NDIS
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(Network Driver Interface Specification) A hardware-independent
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network interface developed by Microsoft and 3com. See also Packet
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Driver, TCP/IP.
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NetBIOS
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One of a number of low-level device-independent network
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interfaces; the other major interfaces are Novell's IPX and the
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Internet's IP (Internet Protocol, the lower-level portion of TCP/IP).
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Network Control Block
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A Network Control Block used to pass requests to NetBIOS and
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receive status information from the NetBIOS handler.
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Network Redirector
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A program which permits access to network devices (disks,
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printers, etc.) using the MSDOS kernel network redirector interface.
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See also Network Shell, Redirector Interface.
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Network Shell
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A program which permits access to network devices (disks,
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printers, etc.) by intercepting DOS calls before they reach the DOS
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kernel and handling those operating on network devices while passing
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through actions on local devices. See also Network Redirector.
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NMI
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see Non-Maskable Interrupt
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Non-Maskable Interrupt
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An interrupt which can not be disabled by clearing the CPU's
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interrupt enable flag, unlike most normal interrupts. Non-maskable
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interrupts are typically used to signal calamities which require
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immediate action, such as a hardware failure or imminent loss of power.
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Non-Volatile RAM
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Memory which can be modified like normal RAM but does not lose
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its contents when the system's power is turned off. This memory may be
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powered by a battery when the system power if off, or it may be a type
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of memory which does not need electricity to maintain its contents,
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such as EEPROM or bubble memory.
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NVRAM
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see Non-Volatile RAM
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ODI
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(Open Data-link Interface) A hardware-independent network
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interface developed by Novell, Inc. See also NDIS, Packet Driver.
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Open File Table
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see Job File Table
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Overscan Area
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The "border" between the edge of the area where graphics or text can
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be displayed and the actual edge of the area the video adapter can illuminate
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on the monitor's screen.
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Overscan Register
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On a display adapter, the control register which specifies the color
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to be displayed in the overscan area.
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Packet Driver
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Any one of the numerous drivers conforming to FTP Software's
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Packet Driver Specification, which provides a hardware-independent
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network interface. See also NDIS, ODI.
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Page Fault
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A CPU-generated signal, and the operating system's reaction to it,
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generated when a program accesses a page of virtual memory which is not
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located in RAM at the time. The operating system's response is to load in
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the required page, possibly writing some other page out to disk in order
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to make room. See also INT 0E.
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Palette Register
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A memory location on the video controller which specifies the actual
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color displayed for a particular color number.
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Park
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To move a hard disk's read/write heads to a position in which
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it is safe to turn off the power and transport the disk drive. Many
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drives also lock the heads into position when they are parked,
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providing additional protection from sudden movement.
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Pel
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see Pixel
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Pixel
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A picture element, the smallest addressable unit of a graphical
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display.
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Post
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Make known, either generally or to a specific handler, that a
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particular event of interest has occurred.
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POST
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see Power-On Self-Test
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Power-On Self-Test
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A brief examination of the system's functionality performed
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each time the system is turned on.
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Print Spooler
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see SPOOL.
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Program Segment Prefix
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The Program Segment Prefix is a 256-byte data area prepended to
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a program when it is loaded. It contains the command line that the
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program was invoked with, and a variety of housekeeping information for
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DOS. See also INT 21h Function 26h.
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Protected Mode
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One of the operating modes of the 80286 and higher Intel
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processors, in which addresses used by programs no longer correspond to
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physical addresses and the CPU enforces various protection mechanisms
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designed to prevent one program from disrupting other programs or the
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operating system. See also Real Mode, Virtual-86 Mode.
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PSP
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see Program Segment Prefix
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PWORD
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Six bytes. Used to hold an 80386 protected-mode "far" address,
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consisting of a segment selector and a 32-bit offset, or a Turbo Pascal
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"real" variable. See also DWORD, QWORD.
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QWORD
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(quad-word) Eight bytes. See also DWORD, PWORD.
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RAM
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(Random Access Memory) See also DRAM, SRAM.
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Real Mode
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One of the operating modes of the 80286 and higher Intel
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processors, and the only operating mode of the 8088, 8086, 80186, and
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80188 processors. In this mode, all addresses used by programs
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correspond directly to real physical addresses (thus the full name,
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Real Address Mode) and there are no CPU-imposed protections between
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programs. See also Protected Mode, Virtual-86 Mode.
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Real-Time Clock
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A battery-powered clock which continues to maintain its time even
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while the system is powered down. On PCs, the real-time clock contains a
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small amount of battery-powered memory (set CMOS RAM).
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Redirector Interface
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The set of device-independent INT 2Fh function calls invoked by
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the MSDOS kernel to operate on devices it recognizes as network
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devices. These function calls provide a lower-level interface than the
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INT 21h calls made to DOS, allowing a program intercepting these
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functions to be simpler than one intercepting INT 21h calls. See INT
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2Fh Functions 1100h through 1130h.
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Refresh
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The process of periodically rewriting the contents of a DRAM
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memory chip to keep it from fading. The term "refresh" is also commonly
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applied to redrawing the image on a CRT's phosphors. See also DRAM.
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RGB
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(Red-Green-Blue) The color specification mechanism normally
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used in computer displays, where colors are separated into their
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primary-color components. See also YUV.
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RLL
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(Run-Length Limited) A method of encoding data as a series of
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magnetic flux reversals on disk or tape. RLL can achieve higher data
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densities than MFM recording because it encodes the data such that
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(on average), fewer than one flux reversal per data bit is required
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(however, timing becomes more critical). RLL is actually an entire
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family of encoding methods, specified with two numbers indicating the
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minimum and maximum distances between one bits (flux transitions). The
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variant normally called RLL is RLL-2,7; RLL-1,7 and RLL-3,9 are also in
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use. MFM is in effect RLL-1,3. See also FM, MFM.
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ROM
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(Read-Only Memory) A memory for program storage which may not be
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changed by the program as it runs.
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RTC
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see Real-Time Clock
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Scan Code
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The actual key number sent by the keyboard, which differs from the
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key codes seen by application programs. The enhanced (101/102-key) keyboard
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actually sends different scan codes than the original (83/84-key) IBM
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keyboard, but these are normally translated by the keyboard controller into
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the scan codes used by the original keyboard before they become visible to
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programs.
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Scatter/Gather
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A technique in which the contiguous data of a disk sector or sectors
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is transferred to or from multiple non-contiguous areas of memory. When
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reading into multiple areas of memory, this is called a scatter-read; the
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opposing operation is called gather-write.
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Scatter-Read
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see Scatter/Gather
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SCSI
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(Small Computer Systems Interface) A system-independent
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expansion bus typically used to connect hard disks, tape drives, and
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CD-ROMs to a computer. A host adapter connects the SCSI bus to the
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computer's own bus. See also ESDI, IDE.
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SDA
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see Swappable Data Area
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Sector
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The smallest addressable unit of data on a disk; under MS-DOS,
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this is normally 512 bytes. See also Track.
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SFT
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see System File Table
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SPOOL
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(Simultaneous Peripheral Operation OnLine) The process of
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performing output to a slow peripheral such as a printer while other
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tasks continue running on the CPU. This term dates back to mainframe
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days before the invention of timesharing.
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SQL
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(Structured Query Language)
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SRAM
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(Static Random Access Memory) RAM which typically consists of one
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flip-flop per bit of memory. Unlike DRAMs, static RAM retains its contents
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as long as power is applied. Because there is no need to refresh the
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contents of memory addresses which are read, SRAM is faster than DRAM,
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but it is more expensive and typically is available in much smaller sizes
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than DRAM because each bit occupies more space on the chip. See also DRAM.
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SVGA
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(Super VGA) A video adapter capable of higher resolution
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(pixels and/or colors) than the 320x200x256 and 640x480x16 which IBM's
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VGA adapter is capable of producing. See also VESA.
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Swappable Data Area
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The portion of the DOS data segment containing all of the
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variables used internally by DOS to record the state of a function call
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in progress. See also INT 21h Function 5D06h and INT 21h Function
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5D0Bh.
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System File Table
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A System File Table is a DOS-internal data structure used to
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maintain the state of an open file for the DOS 2+ handle functions,
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just as an FCB maintains the state for DOS 1.x functions. See also INT
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21h Function 52h.
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TCP
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(Transmission Control Protocol) A higher level (session layer)
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of the TCP/IP protocol suite. See also IP, TCP/IP.
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TCP/IP
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The protocol suite originally developed by DARPA for use on its
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ARPAnet network, which is now known as the Internet. See also IP, TCP.
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TSR
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(Terminate and Stay Resident) A program which remains in memory
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after terminating in order to provide services to other programs or the
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user. The name comes from the name of the DOS function call used to
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remain in memory after termination.
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Track
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One of multiple concentric circular rings of data on a single
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data-bearing surface of a disk. Tracks at the same location on
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different surfaces form a cylinder.
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UMB
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see Upper Memory Block
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UNC
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(Universal Naming Convention) The standard way of describing
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network servers and their directories under MS-DOS and Windows NT. A
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name in UNC format consists of two backslashes followed by the server
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name, optionally followed by another backslash and a list of
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backslash-separated fields; for example
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\\SERVER1\SHARED-DIR\SUBDIR1\SUBDIR2\FILENAME.EXT.
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Upper Memory Block
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A noncontiguous section of allocatable memory located between
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the 640K and 1024K addresses. See also INT 21h Function 52h.
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V86
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see Virtual-86 Mode
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VCPI
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see Virtual Control Program Interface
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VDM
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see Virtual DOS Machine
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VDS
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see Virtual DMA Specification
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VDU
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(Video Display Unit) Mainframe-speak for computer monitor.
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Vertical Retrace
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When a monitor has finished displaying an image by sweeping its
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electron beam(s) over the face of the CRT, it has to move the beam back up
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to the top of the display. During the time this takes, the beam is turned
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off. The vertical retrace interval is a good time to change the displayed
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picture for smooth animation. See also Horizontal Retrace.
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VESA
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(Video Electronics Standards Association) An industry group
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which sets both hardware and software standards and recommendations.
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The term VESA is also used to denote compliance with the VESA SuperVGA
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BIOS Extensions, a standard set of video BIOS functions for accessing
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video modes of higher resolution than those defined by IBM.
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VGA
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(Video Graphics Array) The video adapter introduced with the
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IBM PS/2 series of computers.
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Virtual-86 Mode
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One of the operating modes of the 80386 and 80486 processors in
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which user programs run as if the CPU were in Real Mode, while
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providing the protection and address-mapping capabilities of Protected
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Mode to a supervisor program which oversees the virtual machine on
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which the user programs are running. This mode is called Virtual-86
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because one or more virtual 8086 environments are run on a single CPU.
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See also Protected Mode, Real Mode, Virtual Machine.
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Virtual Control Program Interface
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A simple API for protected-mode programs to allocate memory and
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switch into or out of protected mode. See also DOS Protected-Mode Interface.
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Virtual DMA Specification
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A set of interrupt calls which permit the use of DMA even on
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systems running in protected or Virtual-86 mode with their address
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remapping, or systems such as Micro Channel PS/2s with multiple bus
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masters independently performing DMA operations.
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Virtual DOS Machine
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A special type of virtual machine provided by OS/2 version 2.0,
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in which a copy of MS-DOS or an MS-DOS compatible operating system (or
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even an incompatible 8086 operating system) is run and appears to have
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full control of the system. See also Virtual Machine, INT 21h Function
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64h.
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Virtual Machine
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One method for multitasking programs is to virtualize the CPU
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and other hardware, giving the appearance of sole possession of the
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system to each program being run. Such a virtualized environment is
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called a virtual machine. See also Virtual-86 Mode, Virtual DOS
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Machine.
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virus
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A program which attaches itself to other programs for the purpose
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of duplicating itself. Viruses often (but not always) contain harmful
|
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code which is triggered by some event, after a certain number of
|
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reproductions, or on a specific date. See also worm.
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VM
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see Virtual Machine
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VxD
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A virtual device driver for Windows 3.0 or 3.1. See also
|
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device driver.
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WORM
|
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(Write Once, Read Many) A storage medium which may be written
|
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exactly once, but may not be altered once data is stored.
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worm
|
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A program which duplicates itself, typically across networks.
|
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In contrast to a virus, a worm does not attach itself to other programs,
|
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but can reproduce itself independently. See also virus.
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Write-Through
|
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One of two main types of caches, the write-through cache immediately
|
|
writes any new information to the medium it is caching, so that the cache
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never contains information which is not already present on the cached device.
|
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See also cache,
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XBDA
|
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see Extended BIOS Data Area
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XDI
|
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see External Device Interface
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XGA
|
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(Extended Graphics Array)
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XMS
|
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see Extended Memory Specification
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YIQ
|
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see YUV
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YUV
|
|
A color specification mechanism used in NTSC-type color
|
|
television signals. Y represents luminance (overall brightness, the
|
|
only part of the signal used by black-and-white televisions), while U
|
|
and V are chrominance (color) information. Also called YIQ. See also
|
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RGB.
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