- Branche: Computer
- Number of terms: 318110
- Number of blossaries: 26
- Company Profile:
An American multinational software corporation headquartered in Redmond, Washington that develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of products and services related to computing.
An open service activity status that denotes that, although the resources are not yet scheduled to perform work for this service activitity, a potential time has been found.
Industry:Computer
In photography, the diameter of the aperture expressed in terms of the focal length of the camera lens. The greater the f-number, the less light reaches the film and the more in focus the objects in the foreground and the background will be. For example, with an f-number = 16 the objects in the far background will be in focus. Whereas, with an f-number = 2 the background will be blurry (while foreground objects are in focus).
Industry:Computer
A special control added to a window, typically adjacent to the scroll bar, that allows a user to split a window or adjust a window split.
Industry:Computer
A set of functionality and/or a template to help expose parts of the underlying test framework.
Industry:Computer
A file that contains configuration information for a specific user including settings and restrictions applied by Windows SteadyState.
Industry:Computer
A group of one or more sales tax codes that define sales tax (including duty) for an item. A sales tax group and an item sales tax group must be connected to each transaction that is subject to sales tax. Sales tax is calculated only for the sales tax codes that are included in both the sales tax group and the item sales tax group.
Industry:Computer
A page that divides a Web browser's window into different areas called frames that can independently display Web pages.
Industry:Computer
Pertaining to technologies for converting textual (ASCII) information into synthetic speech output. Used in voice-processing applications requiring production of broad, unrelated, and unpredictable vocabularies, such as products in a catalog or names and addresses. This technology is appropriate when system design constraints prevent the more efficient use of speech concatenation alone.
Industry:Computer
A technique for detecting when data is lost during transmission. This allows the software to recover lost data by notifying the transmitting computer that it needs to retransmit the data.
Industry:Computer