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Apple Inc.
Branche: Computer; Software
Number of terms: 54848
Number of blossaries: 7
Company Profile:
Apple Inc., formerly Apple Computer, Inc., is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Cupertino, California, that designs, develops, and sells consumer electronics, computer software and personal computers.
In Mac OS X, the hardware destination for all system sounds.
Industry:Software; Computer
An Apple-supplied audio unit that connects with whichever hardware device the user has designated to be the system output.
Industry:Software; Computer
A condition that must be met by the computer (and associated operating system) in order for an installation to proceed.
Industry:Software; Computer
An application that has a portion of its features restricted to specific users because of the BSD permissions system.
Industry:Software; Computer
The primary script system used by the operating system, such as in dialogs and menu bars. The system script affects system defaults, such as the system font, line direction, and text-formatting rules. All other scripts are secondary to the system script.
Industry:Software; Computer
A sleep state that occurs when the user chooses Sleep from the Apple menu or closes the lid of a laptop computer. See also idle sleep
Industry:Software; Computer
A control that provides a convenient way to present information in a multipane format.
Industry:Software; Computer
In relational databases, a two-dimensional set of values corresponding to an entity. The columns of a table represent characteristics of the entity and the rows represent instances of the entity.
Industry:Software; Computer
The time, beyond an audio unit’s latency, for a nominal-level signal to decay to silence at an audio unit’€’sutput after it has gone instantaneously to silence at the input. Tail time is significant for audio units performing an effect such as delay or reverberation. An audio unit declares its tail time as a setup assistant.
Industry:Software; Computer
(1) In Xcode, the instructions for building a finished product from a set of files in a project—for example, a framework, library, application, or command-line tool. Each target builds a single product. (2) In AppleScript, the recipient of a command. Potential targets include application objects, script objects (including the current script), and the current application.
Industry:Software; Computer