Computer Terms Glossary
application & app
An application (often called "app" for short) is simply a program with a GUI. Note that it is different from an applet.
boot
Starting up an OS is booting it. If the computer is already running, it is more often called rebooting.
browser
A browser is a program used to browse the web. Some common browsers include Netscape, MSIE (Microsoft Internet Explorer), Safari, Lynx, Mosaic, Amaya, Arena, Chimera, Opera, Cyberdog, HotJava, etc.
bug
A bug is a mistake in the design of something, especially software. A really severe bug can cause something to crash.
chat
Chatting is like e-mail, only it is done instantaneously and can directly involve multiple people at once. While e-mail now relies on one more or less standard protocol, chatting still has a couple competing ones. Of particular note are IRC and Instant Messenger. One step beyond chatting is called MUDding.
click
To press a mouse button. When done twice in rapid succession, it is referred to as a double-click.
cursor
A point of attention on the computer screen, often marked with a flashing line or block.
Text typed into the computer will usually appear at the cursor.
database
A database is a collection of data, typically organized to make common retrievals easy and efficient. Some common database programs include Oracle, Sybase, Postgres, Informix, Filemaker, Adabas, etc.
desktop
A desktop system is a computer designed to sit in one position on a desk somewhere and not move around. Most general purpose computers are desktop systems. Calling a system a desktop implies nothing about its platform. The fastest desktop system at any given time is typically either an Alpha or PowerPC based system, but the SPARC and PA-RISCbased systems are also often in the running. Industrial strength desktops are typically called workstations. directory
Also called "folder", a directory is a collection of files typically created for organizational purposes. Note that a directory is itself a file, so a directory can generally contain other directories. It differs in this way from a partition.
disk
A disk is a physical object used for storing data. It will not forget its data when it loses power. It is always used in conjunction with a disk drive. Some disks can be removed from their drives, some cannot. Generally it is possible to write new information to a disk in addition to reading data from it, but this is not always the case.
drive
A device for storing and/or retrieving data. Some drives (such as disk drives, zip drives, and tape drives) are typically capable of having new data written to them, but some others (like CD-ROMs or DVD-ROMs) are not. Some drives have random access (like disk drives, zip drives, CD-ROMs, and DVD-ROMs), while others only have sequential access (like tape drives).
e-book
The concept behind an e-book is that it should provide all the functionality of an ordinary book but in a manner that is (overall) less expensive and more environmentally friendly. The actual term e-book is somewhat confusingly used to refer to a variety of things: custom software to play e-book titles, dedicated hardware to play e-book titles, and the ebook titles themselves. Individual e-book titles can be free or commercial (but will always be less expensive than their printed counterparts) and have to be loaded into a player to be read. Players vary wildly in capability level. Basic ones allow simple reading and bookmarking; better ones include various features like hypertext, illustrations, audio, and even limited video. Other optional features allow the user to mark-up sections of text, leave notes, circle or diagram things, highlight passages, program or customize settings, and even use interactive fiction. There are many types of e-book; a couple popular ones include the Newton book and Palm DOC.
E-mail is short for electronic mail. It allows for the transfer of information from one computer to another, provided that they are hooked up via some sort of network (often the Internet. E-mail works similarly to FAXing, but its contents typically get printed out on the other end only on demand, not immediately and automatically as with FAX. A machine receiving e-mail will also not reject other incoming mail messages as a busy FAX machine will; rather they will instead be queued up to be received after the current batch has been completed. E-mail is only seven-bit clean, meaning that you should not expect anything other than ASCII data to go through uncorrupted without prior conversion via something like uucode or bcode. Some mailers will do some conversion automatically, but unless you know your mailer is one of them, you may want to do the encoding manually.
file
A file is a unit of (usually named) information stored on a computer.
firmware
Sort of in-between hardware and software, firmware consists of modifiable programsembedded in hardware. Firmware updates should be treated with care since they can literally destroy the underlying hardware if done improperly. There are also cases where neglecting to apply a firmware update can destroy the underlying hardware, so userbeware.
floppy
An extremely common type of removable disk. Floppies do not hold too much data, but most computers are capable of reading them. Note though that there are different competing format used for floppies, so that a floppy written by one type of computer might not directly work on another. Also sometimes called "diskette".
format
The manner in which data is stored; its organization. For example, VHS, SVHS, and Beta are three different formats of video tape. They are not 100% compatible with each other, but information can be transferred from one to the other with the proper equipment (but not always without loss; SVHS contains more information than either of the other two). Computer information can be stored in literally hundreds of different formats, and can represent text, sounds, graphics, animations, etc. Computer information can be exchanged via different computer types provided both computers can interpret the format used.
function keys
On a computer keyboard, the keys that start with an "F" that are usually (but not always) found on the top row. They are meant to perform user-defined tasks.
graphics
Anything visually displayed on a computer that is not text.
hardware
The physical portion of the computer.
hypertext
A hypertext document is like a text document with the ability to contain pointers to other regions of (possibly other) hypertext documents.
Internet
The Internet is the world-wide network of computers. There is only one Internet, and thus it is typically capitalized (although it is sometimes referred to as "the 'net"). It is different from an intranet.
keyboard
A keyboard on a computer is almost identical to a keyboard on a typewriter. Computer keyboards will typically have extra keys, however. Some of these keys (common examples include Control, Alt, and Meta) are meant to be used in conjunction with other keys just like shift on a regular typewriter. Other keys (common examples include Insert, Delete, Home, End, Help, function keys,etc.) are meant to be used independently and often perform editing tasks. Keyboards on different platforms will often look slightly different and have somewhat different collections of keys. Some keyboards even have independent shift lock and caps lock keys. Smaller keyboards with only math-related keys are typically called "keypads".
language
Computer programs can be written in a variety of different languages. Different languages are optimized for different tasks. Common languages include Java, C, C++, ForTran, Pascal, Lisp, and BASIC. Some people classify anguages into two categories, higher-level and lower-level. These people would consider assembly language and machine language lower-level languages and all other languages higher-level. In general, higher-level languages can be either interpreted or compiled; many languages allow both, but some are restricted to one or the other. Many people do not consider machine language and assembly language at all when talking about programming languages.
laptop
A laptop is any computer designed to do pretty much anything a desktop system can do but run for a short time (usually two to five hours) on batteries. They are designed to be carried around but are not particularly convenient to carry around. They are significantly more expensive than desktop systems and have far worse battery life than PDAs. Calling a system a laptop implies nothing about its platform. By far the fastest laptops are the PowerPC based Macintoshes.
memory
Computer memory is used to temporarily store data. In reality, computer memory is only capable of remembering sequences of zeros and ones, but by utilizing the binary number system it is possible to produce arbitrary rational numbers and through clever formattingall manner of representations of pictures, sounds, and animations. The most common types of memory are RAM, ROM, and flash.
modem
A modem allows two computers to communicate over ordinary phone lines. It derives its name from modulate / demodulate, the process by which it converts digital computer data back and forth for use with an analog phone line.
monitor
The screen for viewing computer information is called a monitor.
mouse
In computer parlance a mouse can be both the physical object moved around to control a pointer on the screen, and the pointer itself. Unlike the animal, the proper plural of computer mouse is "mouses".
multimedia
This originally indicated a capability to work with and integrate various types of things including audio, still graphics, and especially video. Now it is more of a marketing term and has little real meaning. Historically the Amiga was the first multimedia machine.
Today in addition to AmigaOS, IRIX and Solaris are popular choices for high-end multimedia work. NCThe term network computer refers to any (usually desktop) computer system that is designed to work as part of a network rather than as a stand-alone machine. This saves money on hardware, software, and maintenance by taking advantage of facilities already available on the network. The term "Internet appliance" is often used interchangeably with NC.
network
A network (as applied to computers) typically means a group of computers working together. It can also refer to the physical wire etc. connecting the computers.
notebook
A notebook is a small laptop with similar price, performance, and battery life.
organizer
An organizer is a tiny computer used primarily to store names, addresses, phone numbers, and date book information. They usually have some ability to exchange information with desktop systems. They boast even better battery life than PDAs but are far less capable.
They are extremely inexpensive but are typically incapable of running any special purpose applications and are thus of limited use.
OS
The operating system is the program that manages a computer's resources. Common OSes include Windows '95, MacOS, Linux, Solaris, AmigaOS, AIX, Windows NT, etc.
PC
The term personal computer properly refers to any desktop, laptop, or notebook computer system. Its use is inconsistent, though, and some use it to specifically refer to x86 based systems running MS-DOS, MS-Windows, GEOS, or OS/2. This latter use is similar to what is meant by a WinTel system.
PDA
A personal digital assistant is a small battery-powered computer intended to be carried around by the user rather than left on a desk. This means that the processor used ought tobe power-efficient as well as fast, and the OS ought to be optimized for hand-held use. PDAs typically have an instant-on feature (they would be useless without it) and most are grayscale rather than color because of battery life issues. Most have a pen interface and come with a detachable stylus. None use mouses. All have some ability to exchange data with desktop systems. In terms of raw capabilities, a PDA is more capable than an organizer and less capable than a laptop (although some high-end PDAs beat out some low-end laptops). By far the most popular PDA is the Pilot, but other common types include Newtons, Psions, Zauri, Zoomers, and Windows CE hand-helds. By far thefastest current PDA is the Newton (based around a StrongARM RISC processor). Other PDAs are optimized for other tasks; few computers are as personal as PDAs and care must be taken in their purchase. Feneric's PDA / Handheld Comparison Page is perhaps the most detailed comparison of PDAs and handheld computers to be found anywhere on the web.
platform
Roughly speaking, a platform represents a computer's family. It is defined by both the processor type on the hardware side and the OS type on the software side. Computers belonging to different platforms cannot typically run each other's programs (unless the programs are written in a language like Java).
portable
If something is portable it can be easily moved from one type of computer to another. The verb "to port" indicates the moving itself.
printer
A printer is a piece of hardware that will print computer information onto paper.
processor
The processor (also called central processing unit, or CPU) is the part of the computer that actually works with the data and runs the programs. There are two main processor types in common usage today: CISC and RISC. Some computers have more than one processor and are thus called "multiprocessor". This is distinct from multitasking. Advertisers often use megahertz numbers as a means of showing a processor's speed. This is often extremely misleading; megahertz numbers are more or less meaningless when compared across different types of processors.
program
A program is a series of instructions for a computer, telling it what to do or how to behave. The terms "application" and "app" mean almost the same thing (albeit applications generally have GUIs). It is however different from an applet. Program is also the verb that means to create a program, and a programmer is one who programs.
run
Running a program is how it is made to do something. The term "execute" means the same thing.
software
The non-physical portion of the computer; the part that exists only as data; the programs. Another term meaning much the same is "code".
spreadsheet
An program used to perform various calculations. It is especially popular for financial applications. Some common spreadsheets include Lotus 123, Excel, OpenOffice Spreadsheet, Octave, Gnumeric, AppleWorks Spreadsheet, Oleo, and GeoCalc.
user
The operator of a computer.
word processor
A program designed to help with the production of textual documents, like letters andmemos. Heavier duty work can be done with a desktop publisher. Some common word processors include MS-Word, OpenOffice Write, WordPerfect, AbiWord, AppleWorks Write, and GeoWrite.
www
The World-Wide-Web refers more or less to all the publically accessable documents on the Internet. It is used quite loosely, and sometimes indicates only HTML files and sometimes FTP and Gopher files, too. It is also sometimes just referred to as "the web". Reference
65xx
The 65xx series of processors includes the 6502, 65C02, 6510, 8502, 65C816, 65C816S, etc. It is a CISC design and is not being used in too many new stand-alone computer systems, but is still being used in embedded systems, game systems (such as the Super NES), and processor enhancement add-ons for older systems. It was originally designed by MOS Technologies, but is now produced by The Western Design Center, Inc. It was the primary processor for many extremely popular systems no longer being produced, including the Commodore 64, the Commodore 128, and all the Apple ][ series machines.
68xx
The 68xx series of processors includes the 6800, 6805, 6809, 68000, 68020, 68030, 68040, 68060, etc. It is a CISC design and is not being used in too many new stand-alone computer systems, but is still being used heavily in embedded systems. It was originally designed by Motorola and was the primary processor for older generations of many current machines, including Macintoshes, Amigas, Sun workstations, HP workstations, etc. and the primary processor for many systems no longer being produced, such as the TRS-80. The PowerPC was designed in part to be its replacement.
ADA
An object-oriented language at one point popular for military and some academic software. Lately C++ and Java have been getting more attention.
AI
Artificial intelligence is the concept of making computers do tasks once considered to require thinking. AI makes computers play chess, recognize handwriting and speech, helps suggest prescriptions to doctors for patients based on imput symptoms, and many other tasks, both mundane and not.
AIX
The industrial strength OS designed by IBM to run on PowerPC and x86 based machines. It is a variant of UNIX and is meant to provide more power than OS/2.
AJaX
AJaX is a little like DHTML, but it adds asynchronous communication between the browser and Web site via either XML or JSON to achieve performance that often rivals desktop applications.
Alpha
An Alpha is a RISC processor invented by Digital and currently produced by Digital/Compaq and Samsung. A few different OSes run on Alpha based machines including Digital UNIX, Windows NT, Linux, NetBSD, and AmigaOS. Historically, at any given time, the fastest processor in the world has usually been either an Alpha or a PowerPC (with sometimes SPARCs and PA-RISCs making the list), but Compaq has recently announced that there will be no further development of this superb processor instead banking on the release of the somewhat suspect Merced. AltiVecAltiVec (also called the "Velocity Engine") is a special extension built into some PowerPC CPUs to provide better performance for certain operations, most notably graphics and sound. It is similar to MMX on the x86 CPUs. Like MMX, it requires special software for full performance benefits to be realized.
Amiga
A platform originally created and only produced by Commodore, but now owned by Gateway 2000 and produced by it and a few smaller companies. It was historically the first multimedia machine and gave the world of computing many innovations. It is now primarily used for audio / video applications; in fact, a decent Amiga system is less expensive than a less capable video editing system. Many music videos were created on Amigas, and a few television series and movies had their special effects generated on Amigas. Also, Amigas can be readily synchronized with video cameras, so typicallywhen a computer screen appears on television or in a movie and it is not flickering wildly, it is probably an Amiga in disguise. Furthermore, many coin-operated arcade games are really Amigas packaged in stand-up boxes. Amigas have AmigaOS for their OS. New Amigas have either a PowerPC or an Alpha for their main processor and a 68xxprocessor dedicated to graphics manipulation. Older (and low end) Amigas do everything with just a 68xx processor.
AmigaOS
The OS used by Amigas. AmigaOS combines the functionality of an OS and a window manager and is fully multitasking. AmigaOS boasts a pretty good selection of games (many arcade games are in fact written on Amigas) but has limited driver support. AmigaOS will run on 68xx, Alpha, and PowerPC based machines.
Apple ][
The Apple ][ computer sold millions of units and is generally considered to have been the first home computer with a 1977 release date. It is based on the 65xx family of processors. The earlier Apple I was only available as a build-it-yourself kit.
AppleScript
A scripting language for Mac OS computers.
applet
An applet differs from an application in that is not meant to be run stand-alone but rather with the assistance of another program, usually a browser.
AppleTalk
AppleTalk is a protocol for computer networks. It is arguably inferior to TCP/IP.
Aqua
The default window manager for Mac OS X.
Archie
Archie is a system for searching through FTP archives for particular files. It tends not to be used too much anymore as more general modern search engines are significantly more capable.
ARM
An ARM is a RISC processor invented by Advanced RISC Machines, currently owned by Intel, and currently produced by both the above and Digital/Compaq. ARMs aredifferent from most other processors in that they were not designed to maximize speed but rather to maximize speed per power consumed. Thus ARMs find most of their use on hand-held machines and PDAs. A few different OSes run on ARM based machines including Newton OS, JavaOS, and (soon) Windows CE and Linux. The StrongARM is a more recent design of the original ARM, and it is both faster and more power efficient than the original.
ASCII
The ASCII character set is the most popular one in common use. People will often refer to a bare text file without complicated embedded format instructions as an ASCII file, and such files can usually be transferred from one computer system to another with relative ease. Unfortunately there are a few minor variations of it that pop up here and there, and if you receive a text file that seems subtly messed up with punctuation marks altered or upper and lower case reversed, you are probably encountering one of the ASCII variants. It is usually fairly straightforward to translate from one ASCII variant toanother, though. The ASCII character set is seven bit while pure binary is usually eight bit, so transferring a binary file through ASCII channels will result in corruption and loss of data. Note also that the ASCII character set is a subset of the Unicode character set.
ASK
A protocol for an infrared communications port on a device. It predates the IrDAcompliant infrared communications protocol and is not compatible with it. Many devices with infrared communications support both, but some only support one or the other.
assembly language
Assembly language is essentially machine language that has had some of the numbers replaced by somewhat easier to remember mnemonics in an attempt to make it more human-readable. The program that converts assembly language to machine language is called an assembler. While assembly language predates FORTRAN, it is not typically what people think of when they discuss computer languages.
Atom
Atom is an intended replacement for RSS and like it is used for syndicating a web site's content. It is currently not nearly as popular or well-supported by software applications, however.
authoring system
Any GUIs method of designing new software can be called an authoring system. Any computer language name with the word "visual" in front of it is probably a version of that language built with some authoring system capabilities. It appears that the first serious effort to produce a commercial quality authoring system took place in the mid eighties for the Amiga.
AWK
AWK is an interpreted language developed in 1977 by Aho, Weinberger, & Kernighan. It gets its name from its creators' initials. It is not particularly fast, but it was designed for creating small throwaway programs rather than full-blown applications -- it is designed to make the writing of the program fast, not the program itself. It is quite portable with ersions existing for numerous platforms, including a free GNU version. Plus, virtually every version of UNIX in the world comes with AWK built-in.
BASIC
The Beginners' All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code is a computer language developed by Kemeny & Kurtz in 1964. Although it is traditionally interpreted, compilersexist for many platforms. While the interpreted form is typically fairly slow, the compiled form is often quite fast, usually faster than Pascal. The biggest problem with BASIC is portability; versions for different machines are often completely unlike each other; Amiga BASIC at first glance looks more like Pascal, for example. Portability problems actually go beyond even the cross platform level; in fact, most machines have multiple versions of incompatible BASICs available for use. The most popular version of BASIC today is called Visual BASIC. Like all BASICs it has portability issues, but it has some of the advantages of an authoring system so it is relatively easy to use.
baud
A measure of communications speed, used typically for modems indicating how many bits per second can be transmitted.
BBS
A bulletin board system is a computer that can be directly connected to via modem and
provides various services like e-mail, chatting, newsgroups, and file downloading. BBSs
have waned in popularity as more and more people are instead connecting to the Internet,
but they are still used for product support and local area access. Most current BBSs
provide some sort of gateway connection to the Internet.
bcode
Identical in intent to uucode, bcode is slightly more efficient and more portable across
different computer types. It is the preferred method used by MIME.
BeOS
A lightweight OS available for both PowerPC and x86 based machines. It is often
referred to simply as "Be".
beta
A beta version of something is not yet ready for prime time but still possibly useful to
related developers and other interested parties. Expect beta software to crash more than
properly released software does. Traditionally beta versions (of commercial software) are
distributed only to selected testers who are often then given a discount on the proper
version after its release in exchange for their testing work. Beta versions of noncommercial software are more often freely available to anyone who has an interest.
binaryThere are two meanings for binary in common computer usage. The first is the name of
the number system in which there are only zeros and ones. This is important to computers
because all computer data is ultimately a series of zeros and ones, and thus can be
represented by binary numbers. The second is an offshoot of the first; data that is not
meant to be intepreted through a common character set (like ASCII) is typically referred
to as binary data. Pure binary data is typically eight bit data, and transferring a binary file
through ASCII channels without prior modification will result in corruption and loss of
data. Binary data can be turned into ASCII data via uucoding or bcoding.
bit
A bit can either be on or off; one or zero. All computer data can ultimately be reduced to
a series of bits. The term is also used as a (very rough) measure of sound quality, color
quality, and even processor capability by considering the fact that series of bits can
represent binary numbers. For example (without getting too technical), an eight bit image
can contain at most 256 distinct colors while a sixteen bit image can contain at most
65,536 distinct colors.
bitmap
A bitmap is a simplistic representation of an image on a computer, simply indicating
whether or not pixels are on or off, and sometimes indicating their color. Often fonts are
represented as bitmaps. The term "pixmap" is sometimes used similarly; typically when a
distinction is made, pixmap refers to color images and bitmap refers to monochrome
images.
blog
Short for web log, a blog (or weblog, or less commonly, 'blog) is a web site containing
periodic (usually frequent) posts. Blogs are usually syndicated via either some type of
RSS or Atom and often supports TrackBacks. It is not uncommon for blogs to function
much like newspaper columns. A blogger is someone who writes for and maintains a
blog.
boolean
Boolean algebra is the mathematics of base two numbers. Since base two numbers have
only two values, zero and one, there is a good analogy between base two numbers and the
logical values "true" & "false". In common usage, booleans are therefore considered to be
simple logical values like true & false and the operations that relate them, most typically
"and", "or" and "not". Since everyone has a basic understanding of the concepts of true &
false and basic conjunctions, everyone also has a basic understanding of boolean
concepts -- they just may not realize it.
byte
A byte is a grouping of bits. It is typically eight bits, but there are those who use nonstandard byte sizes. Bytes are usually measured in large groups, and the term "kilobyte"
(often abbreviated as K) means one-thousand twenty-four (1024) bytes; the term
"megabyte" (often abbreviated as M) means one-thousand twenty-four (1024) K; the term
gigabyte (often abbreviated as G) means one-thousand twenty-four (1024) M; and the
term "terabyte" (often abbreviated as T) means one-thousand twenty-four (1024) G.
Memory is typically measured in kilobytes or megabytes, and disk space is typically measured in megabytes or gigabytes. Note that the multipliers here are 1024 instead of
the more common 1000 as would be used in the metric system. This is to make it easier
to work with the binary number system. Note also that some hardware manufacturers will
use the smaller 1000 multiplier on M & G quantities to make their disk drives seem larger
than they really are; buyer beware.
bytecode
Sometimes computer languages that are said to be either interpreted or compiled are in
fact neither and are more accurately said to be somewhere in between. Such languages
are compiled into bytecode which is then interpreted on the target system. Bytecode tends
to be binary but will work on any machine with the appropriate runtime environment (or
virtual machine) for it.
C
C is one of the most popular computer languages in the world, and quite possibly the
most popular. It is a compiled language widely supported on many platforms. It tends to
be more portable than FORTRAN but less portable than Java; it has been standardized by
ANSI as "ANSI C" -- older versions are called either "K&R C" or "Kernighan and
Ritchie C" (in honor of C's creators), or sometimes just "classic C". Fast and simple, it
can be applied to all manner of general purpose tasks. C compilers are made by several
companies, but the free GNU version (gcc) is still considered one of the best. Newer Clike object-oriented languages include both Java and C++.
C++
C++ is a compiled object-oriented language. Based heavily on C, C++ is nearly as fast
and can often be thought of as being just C with added features. It is currently probably
the second most popular object-oriented language, but it has the drawback of being fairly
complex -- the much simpler but somewhat slower Java is probably the most popular
object-oriented language. Note that C++ was developed independently of the somewhat
similar Objective-C; it is however related to Objective-C++.
C64/128
The Commodore 64 computer to this day holds the record for being the most successful
model of computer ever made with even the lowest estimates being in the tens of
millions. Its big brother, the Commodore 128, was not quite as popular but still sold
several million units. Both units sported ROM-based BASIC and used it as a default
"OS". The C128 also came with CP/M (it was a not-often-exercised option on the C64).
In their later days they were also packaged with GEOS. Both are based on 65xx family
processors. They are still in use today and boast a friendly and surprisingly active user
community. There is even a current effort to port Linux to the C64 and C128 machines.
CDE
The common desktop environment is a popular commercial window manager (and much
more -- as its name touts, it is more of a desktop environment) that runs under XWindows. Free work-alike versions are also available.
chainSome computer devices support chaining, the ability to string multiple devices in a
sequence plugged into just one computer port. Often, but not always, such a chain will
require some sort of terminator to mark the end. For an example, a SCSI scanner may be
plugged into a SCSI CD-ROM drive that is plugged into a SCSI hard drive that is in turn
plugged into the main computer. For all these components to work properly, the scanner
would also have to have a proper terminator in use. Device chaining has been around a
long time, and it is interesting to note that C64/128 serial devices supported it from the
very beginning. Today the most common low-cost chainable devices in use support USB
while the fastest low-cost chainable devices in use support FireWire.
character set
Since in reality all a computer can store are series of zeros and ones, representing
common things like text takes a little work. The solution is to view the series of zeros and
ones instead as a sequence of bytes, and map each one to a particular letter, number, or
symbol. The full mapping is called a character set. The most popular character set is
commonly referred to as ASCII. The second most popular character set these days is
Unicode (and it will probably eventually surpass ASCII). Other fairly common character
sets include EBCDIC and PETSCII. They are generally quite different from one another;
programs exist to convert between them on most platforms, though. Usually EBCDIC is
only found on really old machines.
CISC
Complex instruction set computing is one of the two main types of processor design in
use today. It is slowly losing popularity to RISC designs; currently all the fastest
processors in the world are RISC. The most popular current CISC processor is the x86,
but there are also still some 68xx, 65xx, and Z80s in use.
CLI
A command-line interface is a text-based means of communicating with a program,
especially an OS. This is the sort of interface used by MS-DOS, or a UNIX shell window.
COBOL
The Common Business Oriented Language is a language developed back in 1959 and
still used by some businesses. While it is relatively portable, it is still disliked by many
professional programmers simply because COBOL programs tend to be physically longer
than equivalent programs written in almost any other language in common use.
compiled
If a program is compiled, its original human-readable source has been converted into a
form more easily used by a computer prior to it being run. Such programs will generally
run more quickly than interpreted programs, because time was pre-spent in the
compilation phase. A program that compiles other programs is called a compiler.
compression
It is often possible to remove redundant information or capitalize on patterns in data to
make a file smaller. Usually when a file has been compressed, it cannot be used until it is
uncompressed. Image files are common exceptions, though, as many popular image file
formats have compression built-in. cookie
A cookie is a small file that a web page on another machine writes to your personal
machine's disk to store various bits of information. Many people strongly detest cookies
and the whole idea of them, and most browsers allow the reception of cookies to be
disabled or at least selectively disabled, but it should be noted that both Netscape and
MSIE have silent cookie reception enabled by default. Sites that maintain shopping carts
or remember a reader's last position have legitimate uses for cookies. Sites without such
functionality that still spew cookies with distant (or worse, non-existent) expiration dates
should perhaps be treated with a little caution.
CP/M
An early DOS for desktops, CP/M runs on both Z80 and the x86 based machines. CP/M
provides only a CLI and there really is not any standard way to get a window manager to
run on top of it. It is fairly complex and tricky to use. In spite of all this, CP/M was once
the most popular DOS and is still in use today.
crash
If a bug in a program is severe enough, it can cause that program to crash, or to become
inoperable without being restarted. On machines that are not multitasking, the entire
machine will crash and have to be rebooted. On machines that are only partially
multitasking the entire machine will sometimes crash and have to be rebooted. On
machines that are fully multitasking, the machine should never crash and require a
reboot.
Cray
A Cray is a high-end computer used for research and frequently heavy-duty graphics
applications. Modern Crays typically have Solaris for their OS and sport sixty-four RISC
processors; older ones had various other configurations. Current top-of-the-line Crays can
have over 2000 processors.
crippleware
Crippleware is a variant of shareware that will either self-destruct after its trial period or
has built-in limitations to its functionality that get removed after its purchase.
CSS
Cascading style sheets are used in conjunction with HTML and XHTML to define the
layout of web pages. While CSS is how current web pages declare how they should be
displayed, it tends not to be supported well (if at all) by ancient browsers. XSL performs
this same function more generally.
desktop publisher
A program for creating newspapers, magazines, books, etc. Some common desktop
publishing programs include FrameMaker, PageMaker, InDesign, and GeoPublish.
DHTML
Dynamic HTML is simply the combined use of both CSS and JavaScript together in the
same document; a more extreme form is called AJaX. Note that DHTML is quite
different from the similarly named DTML.
dict
A protocol used for looking up definitions across a network (in particular the Internet).
digital camera
A digital camera looks and behaves like a regular camera, except instead of using film, it
stores the image it sees in memory as a file for later transfer to a computer. Many digital
cameras offer additional storage besides their own internal memory; a few sport some
sort of disk but the majority utilize some sort of flash card. Digital cameras currently lack
the resolution and color palette of real cameras, but are usually much more convenient for
computer applications. Another related device is called a scanner.
DIMM
A physical component used to add RAM to a computer. Similar to, but incompatible
with, SIMMs.
DNS
Domain name service is the means by which a name (like www.saugus.net or
ftp.saugus.net) gets converted into a real Internet address that points to a particular
machine.
DoS
In a denial of service attack, many individual (usually compromised) computers are used
to try and simultaneously access the same public resource with the intent of
overburdening it so that it will not be able to adequately serve its normal users.
DOS
A disk operating system manages disks and other system resources. Sort of a subset of
OSes, sort of an archaic term for the same. MS-DOS is the most popular program
currently calling itself a DOS. CP/M was the most popular prior to MS-DOS.
download
To download a file is to copy it from a remote computer to your own. The opposite is
upload.
DR-DOS
The DOS currently produced by Caldera (originally produced by Design Research as a
successor to CP/M) designed to work like MS-DOS. While similar to CP/M in many
ways, it utilizes simpler commands. It provides only a CLI, but either Windows 3.1 or
GEOS may be run on top of it to provide a GUI. It only runs on x86 based machines.
driver
A driver is a piece of software that works with the OS to control a particular piece of
hardware, like a printer or a scanner or a mouse or whatever.
DRM
Depending upon whom you ask, DRM can stand for either Digital Rights Management or
Digital Restrictions Management. In either case, DRM is used to place restrictions upon
the usage of digital media ranging from software to music to video. DTML
The Document Template Mark-up Language is a subset of SGML and a superset of
HTML used for creating documents that dynamically adapt to external conditions using
its own custom tags and a little bit of Python. Note that it is quite different from the
similarly named DHTML.
EDBIC
The EDBIC character set is similar to (but less popular than) the ASCII character set in
concept, but is significantly different in layout. It tends to be found only on old
machines..
emacs
Emacs is both one of the most powerful and one of the most popular text editing
programs in existence. Versions can be found for most platforms, and in fact multiple
companies make versions, so for a given platform there might even be a choice. There is
even a free GNU version available. The drawback with emacs is that it is not in the least
bit lightweight. In fact, it goes so far in the other direction that even its advocates will
occasionally joke about it. It is however extremely capable. Almost anything that one
would need to relating to text can be done with emacs and is probably built-in. Even if
one manages to find something that emacs was not built to do, emacs has a built-in Lisp
interpreter capable of not only extending its text editing capabilities, but even of being
used as a scripting language in its own right.
embedded
An embedded system is a computer that lives inside another device and acts as a
component of that device. For example, current cars have an embedded computer under
the hood that helps regulate much of their day to day operation.
An embedded file is a file that lives inside another and acts as a portion of that file. This
is frequently seen with HTML files having embedded audio files; audio files often
embedded in HTML include AU files, MIDI files, SID files, WAV files, AIFF files, and
MOD files. Most browsers will ignore these files unless an appropriate plug-in is present.
emulator
An emulator is a program that allows one computer platform to mimic another for the
purposes of running its software. Typically (but not always) running a program through
an emulator will not be quite as pleasant an experience as running it on the real system.
endian
A processor will be either "big endian" or "little endian" based upon the manner in which
it encodes multiple byte values. There is no difference in performance between the two
encoding methods, but it is one of the sources of difficulty when reading binary data on
different platforms.
environment
An environment (sometimes also called a runtime environment) is a collection of external
variable items or parameters that a program can access when run. Information about the
computer's hardware and the user can often be found in the environment. EPOC
EPOC is a lightweight OS. It is most commonly found on the Psion PDA.
extension
Filename extensions originate back in the days of CP/M and basically allow a very rough
grouping of different file types by putting a tag at the end of the name. To further
complicate matters, the tag is sometimes separated by the name proper by a period "." and
sometimes by a tab. While extensions are semi-enforced on CP/M, MS-DOS, and MSWindows, they have no real meaning aside from convention on other platforms and are
only optional.
FAQ
A frequently asked questions file attempts to provide answers for all commonly asked
questions related to a given topic.
FireWire
An incredibly fast type of serial port that offers many of the best features of SCSI at a
lower price. Faster than most types of parallel port, a single FireWire port is capable of
chaining many devices without the need of a terminator. FireWire is similar in many
respects to USB but is significantly faster and somewhat more expensive. It is heavily
used for connecting audio/video devices to computers, but is also used for connecting
storage devices like drives and other assorted devices like printers and scanners.
fixed width
As applied to a font, fixed width means that every character takes up the same amount of
space. That is, an "i" will be just as wide as an "m" with empty space being used for
padding. The opposite is variable width. The most common fixed width font is Courier.
flash
Flash memory is similar to RAM. It has one significant advantage: it does not lose its
contents when power is lost; it has two main disadvantages: it is slower, and it eventually
wears out. Flash memory is frequently found in PCMCIA cards.
font
In a simplistic sense, a font can be thought of as the physical description of a character
set. While the character set will define what sets of bits map to what letters, numbers, and
other symbols, the font will define what each letter, number, and other symbol looks like.
Fonts can be either fixed width or variable width and independently, either bitmapped or
vectored. The size of the large characters in a font is typically measured in points.
Forth
A language developed in 1970 by Moore. Forth is fairly portable and has versions on
many different platforms. While it is no longer an very popular language, many of its
ideas and concepts have been carried into other computer programs. In particular, some
programs for doing heavy-duty mathematical and engineering work use Forth-like
interfaces.
FORTRAN
FORTRAN stands for formula translation and is the oldest computer language in the
world. It is typically compiled and is quite fast. Its primary drawbacks are portability and
ease-of-use -- often different FORTRAN compilers on different platforms behave quite
differently in spite of standardization efforts in 1966 (FORTRAN 66 or FORTRAN IV),
1978 (FORTRAN 77), and 1991 (FORTRAN 90). Today languages like C and Java are
more popular, but FORTRAN is still heavily used in military software. It is somewhat
amusing to note that when FORTRAN was first released back in 1958 its advocates
thought that it would mean the end of software bugs. In truth of course by making the
creation of more complex software practical, computer languages have merely created
new types of software bugs.
FreeBSD
A free variant of Berkeley UNIX available for Alpha and x86 based machines. It is not as
popular as Linux.
freeware
Freeware is software that is available for free with no strings attached. The quality is
often superb as the authors are also generally users.
FTP
The file transfer protocol is one of the most commonly used methods of copying files
across the Internet. It has its origins on UNIX machines, but has been adapted to almost
every type of computer in existence and is built into many browsers. Most FTP programs
have two modes of operation, ASCII, and binary. Transmitting an ASCII file via the
ASCII mode of operation is more efficient and cleaner. Transmitting a binary file via the
ASCII mode of operation will result in a broken binary file. Thus the FTP programs that
do not support both modes of operation will typically only do the binary mode, as binary
transfers are capable of transferring both kinds of data without corruption.
gateway
A gateway connects otherwise separate computer networks.
GEOS
The graphic environment operating system is a lightweight OS with a GUI. It runs on
several different processors, including the 65xx (different versions for different machines
-- there are versions for the C64, the C128, and the Apple ][, each utilizing the relevant
custom chip sets), the x86 (although the x86 version is made to run on top of MS-DOS
(or PC-DOS or DR-DOS) and is not strictly a full OS or a window manager, rather it is
somewhat in between, like Windows 3.1) and numerous different PDAs, embedded
devices, and hand-held machines. It was originally designed by Berkeley Softworks (no
real relation to the Berkeley of UNIX fame) but is currently in a more interesting state:
the company GeoWorks develops and promotes development of GEOS for hand-held
devices, PDAs, & and embedded devices and owns (but has ceased further development
on) the x86 version. The other versions are owned (and possibly still being developed) by
the company CMD.
GlulxA virtual machine optimized for running interactive fiction, interactive tutorials, and
other interactive things of a primarily textual nature. Glulx has been ported to several
platforms, and in many ways an upgrade to the Z-machine.
GNOME
The GNU network object model environment is a popular free window manager (and
much more -- as its name touts, it is more of a desktop environment) that runs under XWindows. It is a part of the GNU project.
GNU
GNU stands for GNU's not UNIX and is thus a recursive acronym (and unlike the animal
name, the "G" here is pronounced). At any rate, the GNU project is an effort by the Free
Software Foundation (FSF) to make all of the traditional UNIX utilities free for whoever
wants them. The Free Software Foundation programmers know their stuff, and the quality
of the GNU software is on par with the best produced commercially, and often better. All
of the GNU software can be downloaded for free or obtained on CD-ROM for a small
service fee. Documentation for all GNU software can be downloaded for free or obtained
in book form for a small service fee. The Free Software Foundation pays its bills from the
collection of service fees and the sale of T-shirts, and exists mostly through volunteer
effort. It is based in Cambridge, MA.
gopher
Though not as popular as FTP or http, the gopher protocol is implemented by many
browsers and numerous other programs and allows the transfer of files across networks.
In some respects it can be thought of as a hybrid between FTP and http, although it tends
not to be as good at raw file transfer as FTP and is not as flexible as http. The collection
of documents available through gopher is often called "gopherspace", and it should be
noted that gopherspace is older than the web. It should also be noted that gopher is not
getting as much attention as it once did, and surfing through gopherspace is a little like
exploring a ghost town, but there is an interesting VR interface available for it, and some
things in gopherspace still have not been copied onto the web.
GUI
A graphical user interface is a graphics-based means of communicating with a program,
especially an OS or window manager. In fact, a window manager can be thought of as a
GUI for a CLI OS.
HP-UX
HP-UX is the version of UNIX designed by Hewlett-Packard to work with their PARISC and 68xx based machines.
HTML
The Hypertext Mark-up Language is the language currently most frequently used to
express web pages (although it is rapidly being replaced by XHTML). Every browser has
the built-in ability to understand HTML. Some browsers can additionally understand Java
and browse FTP areas. HTML is a proper subset of SGML.
httpThe hypertext transfer protocol is the native protocol of browsers and is most typically
used to transfer HTML formatted files. The secure version is called "https".
Hurd
The Hurd is the official GNU OS. It is still in development and is not yet supported on
too many different processors, but promises to be the most powerful OS available. It (like
all the GNU software) is free.
i18n
Commonly used to abbreviate the word "internationalization". There are eighteen letters
between the "i" and the "n". Similar to (and often used along with) i18n.
iCalendar
The iCalendar standard refers to the format used to store calendar type information
(including events, to-do items, and journal entries) on the Internet. iCalendar data can be
found on some World-Wide-Web pages or attached to e-mail messages.
icon
A small graphical display representing an object, action, or modifier of some sort.
IDE
Loosely speaking, a disk format sometimes used by MS-Windows, Mac OS, AmigaOS,
and (rarely) UNIX. EIDE is enhanced IDE; it is much faster. Generally IDE is inferior
(but less expensive) to SCSI, but it varies somewhat with system load and the individual
IDE and SCSI components themselves. The quick rundown is that: SCSI-I and SCSI-II
will almost always outperform IDE; EIDE will almost always outperform SCSI-I and
SCSI-II; SCSI-III and UltraSCSI will almost always outperform EIDE; and heavy system
loads give an advantage to SCSI. Note that although loosely speaking it is just a format
difference, it is deep down a hardware difference.
Inform
A compiled, object-oriented language optimized for creating interactive fiction.
infrared communications
A device with an infrared port can communicate with other devices at a distance by
beaming infrared light signals. Two incompatible protocols are used for infrared
communications: IrDA and ASK. Many devices support both.
Instant Messenger
AOL's Instant Messenger is a means of chatting over the Internet in real-time. It allows
both open group discussions and private conversations. Instant Messenger uses a
different, proprietary protocol from the more standard IRC, and is not supported on as
many platforms.
interactive fiction
Interactive fiction (often abbreviated "IF" or "I-F") is a form of literature unique to the
computer. While the reader cannot influence the direction of a typical story, the reader
plays a more active role in an interactive fiction story and completely controls its
direction. Interactive fiction works come in all the sizes and genres available to standard fiction, and in fact are not always even fiction per se (interactive tutorials exist and are
slowly becoming more common).
interpreted
If a program is interpreted, its actual human-readable source is read as it is run by the
computer. This is generally a slower process than if the program being run has already
been compiled.
intranet
An intranet is a private network. There are many intranets scattered all over the world.
Some are connected to the Internet via gateways.
IP
IP is the family of protocols that makes up the Internet. The two most common flavors
are TCP/IP and UDP/IP.
IRC
Internet relay chat is a means of chatting over the Internet in real-time. It allows both
open group discussions and private conversations. IRC programs are provided by many
different companies and will work on many different platforms. AOL's Instant Messenger
utilizes a separate incompatible protocol but is otherwise very similar.
IrDA
The Infrared Data Association (IrDA) is a voluntary organization of various
manufacturers working together to ensure that the infrared communications between
different computers, PDAs, printers, digital cameras, remote controls, etc. are all
compatible with each other regardless of brand. The term is also often used to designate
an IrDA compliant infrared communications port on a device. Informally, a device able
to communicate via IrDA compliant infrared is sometimes simply said to "have IrDA".
There is also an earlier, incompatible, and usually slower type of infrared
communications still in use called ASK.
IRIX
The variant of UNIX designed by Silicon Graphics, Inc. IRIX machines are known for
their graphics capabilities and were initially optimized for multimedia applications.
ISDN
An integrated service digital network line can be simply looked at as a digital phone line.
ISDN connections to the Internet can be four times faster than the fastest regular phone
connection, and because it is a digital connection a modem is not needed. Any computer
hooked up to ISDN will typically require other special equipment in lieu of the modem,
however. Also, both phone companies and ISPs charge more for ISDN connections than
regular modem connections.
ISP
An Internet service provider is a company that provides Internet support for other
entities. AOL (America Online) is a well-known ISP.
JavaA computer language designed to be both fairly lightweight and extremely portable. It is
tightly bound to the web as it is the primary language for web applets. There has also
been an OS based on Java for use on small hand-held, embedded, and network
computers. It is called JavaOS. Java can be either interpreted or compiled. For web applet
use it is almost always interpreted. While its interpreted form tends not to be very fast, its
compiled form can often rival languages like C++ for speed. It is important to note
however that speed is not Java's primary purpose -- raw speed is considered secondary to
portability and ease of use.
JavaScript
JavaScript (in spite of its name) has nothing whatsoever to do with Java (in fact, it's
arguably more like Newton Script than Java). JavaScript is an interpreted language built
into a browser to provide a relatively simple means of adding interactivity to web pages.
It is only supported on a few different browsers, and tends not to work exactly the same
on different versions. Thus its use on the Internet is somewhat restricted to fairly simple
programs. On intranets where there are usually fewer browser versions in use, JavaScript
has been used to implement much more complex and impressive programs.
jiffy
A jiffy is 1/60 of a second. Jiffies are to seconds as seconds are to minutes.
joystick
A joystick is a physical device typically used to control objects on a computer screen. It
is frequently used for games and sometimes used in place of a mouse.
JSON
The JSON is used for data interchange between programs, an area in which the
ubiquitous XML is not too well-suited. JSON is lightweight and works extremely cleanly
with languages including JavaScript, Python, Java, C++, and many others.
JSON-RPC
JSON-RPC is like XML-RPC but is significantly more lightweight since it uses JSON in
lieu of XML.
KDE
The K desktop environment is a popular free window manager (and much more -- as its
name touts, it is more of a desktop environment) that runs under X-Windows.
Kerberos
Kerberos is a network authentication protocol. Basically it preserves the integrity of
passwords in any untrusted network (like the Internet). Kerberized applications work
hand-in-hand with sites that support Kerberos to ensure that passwords cannot be stolen.
kernel
The very heart of an OS is often called its kernel. It will usually (at minimum) provide
some libraries that give programmers access to its various features.
l10nCommonly used to abbreviate the word "localization". There are ten letters between the
"l" and the "n". Similar to (and often used along with) i18n.
library
A selection of routines used by programmers to make computers do particular things.
lightweight
Something that is lightweight will not consume computer resources (such as RAM and
disk space) too much and will thus run on less expensive computer systems.
Linux
Believe it or not, one of the fastest, most robust, and powerful multitasking OSes is
available for free. Linux can be downloaded for free or be purchased on CD-ROM for a
small service charge. A handful of companies distribute Linux including Red Hat,
Debian, Caldera, and many others. Linux is also possibly available for more hardware
combinations than any other OS (with the possible exception of NetBSD. Supported
processors include: Alpha, PowerPC, SPARC, x86, and 68xx. Most processors currently
not supported are currently works-in-progress or even available in beta. For example,
work is currently underway to provide support for PA-RISC, 65xx, StrongARM, and
Z80. People have even successfully gotten Linux working on PDAs. As you may have
guessed, Linux can be made quite lightweight. Linux is a variant of UNIX and as such,
most of the traditional UNIX software will run on Linux. This especially includes the
GNU software, most of which comes with the majority of Linux distributions. Fast,
reliable, stable, and inexpensive, Linux is popular with ISPs, software developers, and
home hobbyists alike.
Lisp
Lisp stands for list processing and is the second oldest computer language in the world.
Being developed in 1959, it lost the title to FORTRAN by only a few months. It is
typically interpreted, but compilers are available for some platforms. Attempts were
made to standardize the language, and the standard version is called "Common Lisp".
There have also been efforts to simplify the language, and the results of these efforts is
another language called Scheme. Lisp is a fairly portable language, but is not particularly
fast. Today, Lisp is most widely used with AI software.
load
There are two popular meanings for load. The first means to fetch some data or a
program from a disk and store it in memory. The second indicates the amount of work a
component (especially a processor) is being made to do.
Logo
Logo is an interpreted language designed by Papert in 1966 to be a tool for helping
people (especially kids) learn computer programming concepts. In addition to being used
for that purpose, it is often used as a language for controlling mechanical robots and other
similar devices. Logo interfaces even exist for building block / toy robot sets. Logo uses a
special graphics cursor called "the turtle", and Logo is itself sometimes called "Turtle
Graphics". Logo is quite portable but not particularly fast. Versions can be found on
almost every computer platform in the world. Additionally, some other languages (notably some Pascal versions) provide Logo-like interfaces for graphics-intensive
programming.
lossy
If a process is lossy, it means that a little quality is lost when it is performed. If a format
is lossy, it means that putting data into that format (or possibly even manipulating it in
that format) will cause some slight loss. Lossy processes and formats are typically used
for performance or resource utilization reasons. The opposite of lossy is lossless.
Lua
Lua is a simple interpreted language. It is extremely portable, and free versions exist for
most platforms.
Mac OS
Mac OS is the OS used on Macintosh computers. There are two distinctively different
versions of it; everything prior to version 10 (sometimes called Mac OS Classic) and
everything version 10 or later (called Mac OS X).
Mac OS Classic
The OS created by Apple and originally used by Macs is frequently (albeit slightly
incorrectly) referred to as Mac OS Classic (officially Mac OS Classic is this original OS
running under the modern Mac OS X in emulation. Mac OS combines the functionality
of both an OS and a window manager and is often considered to be the easiest OS to use.
It is partially multitasking but will still sometimes crash when dealing with a buggy
program. It is probably the second most popular OS, next only to Windows 'XP (although
it is quickly losing ground to Mac OS X) and has excellent driver support and boasts a
fair selection of games. Mac OS will run on PowerPC and 68xx based machines.
Mac OS X
Mac OS X (originally called Rhapsody) is the industrial strength OS produced by Apple
to run on both PowerPC and x86 systems (replacing what is often referred to as Mac OS
Classic. Mac OS X is at its heart a variant of UNIX and possesses its underlying power
(and the ability to run many of the traditional UNIX tools, including the GNU tools). It
also was designed to mimic other OSes on demand via what it originally referred to as
"boxes" (actually high-performance emulators); it has the built-in capability to run
programs written for older Mac OS (via its "BlueBox", officially called Mac OS Classic)
and work was started on making it also run Windows '95 / '98 / ME software (via what
was called its "YellowBox"). There are also a few rumors going around that future
versions may even be able to run Newton software (via the "GreenBox"). It provides a
selection of two window managers built-in: Aqua and X-Windows (with Aqua being the
default).
machine language
Machine language consists of the raw numbers that can be directly understood by a
particular processor. Each processor's machine language will be different from other
processors' machine language. Although called "machine language", it is not usually what
people think of when talking about computer languages. Machine language dressed up
with mnemonics to make it a bit more human-readable is called assembly language. Macintosh
A Macintosh (or a Mac for short) is a computer system that has Mac OS for its OS. There
are a few different companies that produce Macs, but by far the largest is Apple. Older
Macs are based on the 68xx processor, newer Macs on the PowerPC processor. The
Macintosh was really the first general purpose computer to employ a GUI.
mainframe
A mainframe is any computer larger than a small piece of furniture. A modern mainframe
is more powerful than a modern workstation, but more expensive and more difficult to
maintain.
MathML
The Math Mark-up Language is a subset of XML used to represent mathematical
formulae and equations. Typically it is found embedded within XHTML documents,
although as of this writing not all popular browsers support it.
megahertz
A million cycles per second, abbreviated MHz. This is often used misleadingly to
indicate processor speed, because while one might expect that a higher number would
indicate a faster processor, that logic only holds true within a given type of processors as
different types of processors are capable of doing different amounts of work within a
cycle. For a current example, either a 200 MHz PowerPC or a 270 MHz SPARC will
outperform a 300 MHz Pentium.
Merced
The Merced is a RISC processor developed by Intel with help from Hewlett-Packard and
possibly Sun. It is just starting to be released, but is intended to eventually replace both
the x86 and PA-RISC processors. Curiously, HP is recommending that everyone hold off
using the first release and instead wait for the second one. It is expected some day to be
roughly as fast as an Alpha or PowerPC. It is expected to be supported by future versions
of Solaris, Windows-NT, HP-UX, Mac OS X, and Linux. The current semi-available
Merced processor is called the Itanium. Its overall schedule is way behind, and some
analysts predict that it never will really be released in significant quantities.
MFM
Loosely speaking, An old disk format sometimes used by CP/M, MS-DOS, and MSWindows. No longer too common as it cannot deliver close to the performance of either
SCSI or IDE.
middleware
Software designed to sit in between an OS and applications. Common examples are Java
and Tcl/Tk.
MIME
The multi-purpose Internet mail extensions specification describes a means of sending
non-ASCII data (such as images, sounds, foreign symbols, etc.) through e-mail. It
commonly utilizes bcode.
MMXMultimedia extensions were built into some x86 CPUs to provide better performance for
certain operations, most notably graphics and sound. It is similar to AltiVec on the
PowerPC CPUs. Like AltiVec, it requires special software for full performance benefits
to be realized.
MOB
A movable object is a graphical object that is manipulated separately from the
background. These are seen all the time in computer games. When implemented in
hardware, MOBs are sometimes called sprites.
Modula-2
Modula-2 is an object-oriented language based on Pascal by its original author in 1977.
Modula-3 is a further enhanced form. Both versions are compiled languages.
MOTD
A message of the day. Many computers (particularly more capable ones) are configured
to display a MOTD when accessed remotely.
Motif
Motif is a popular commercial window manager that runs under X-Windows. Free workalike versions are also available.
MS-DOS
The DOS produced by Microsoft. Early versions of it bear striking similarities to the
earlier CP/M, but it utilizes simpler commands. It provides only a CLI, but either OS/2,
Windows 3.1, Windows '95, Windows '98, Windows ME, or GEOS may be run on top of
it to provide a GUI. It only runs on x86 based machines.
MS-Windows
MS-Windows is the name collectively given to several somewhat incompatible OSes all
produced by Microsoft. They are: Windows CE, Windows NT, Windows 3.1, Windows
'95, Windows '98, Windows ME, Windows 2000, and Windows XP.
MUD
A multi-user dimension (also sometimes called multi-user dungeon, but in either case
abbreviated to "MUD") is sort of a combination between the online chatting abilities
provided by something like IRC and a role-playing game. A MUD built with object
oriented principles in mind is called a "Multi-user dimension object-oriented", or MOO.
Yet another variant is called a "multi-user shell", or MUSH. Still other variants are called
multi-user role-playing environments (MURPE) and multi-user environments (MUSE).
There are probably more. In all cases the differences will be mostly academic to the
regular user, as the same software is used to connect to all of them. Software to connect
to MUDs can be found for most platforms, and there are even Java based ones that can
run from within a browser.
multitasking
Some OSes have built into them the ability to do several things at once. This is called
multitasking, and has been in use since the late sixties / early seventies. Since this ability
is built into the software, the overall system will be slower running two things at once than it will be running just one thing. A system may have more than one processor built
into it though, and such a system will be capable of running multiple things at once with
less of a performance hit.
nagware
Nagware is a variant of shareware that will frequently remind its users to register.
NetBSD
A free variant of Berkeley UNIX available for Alpha, x86, 68xx, PA-RISC, SPARC,
PowerPC, ARM, and many other types of machines. Its emphasis is on portability.
netiquette
The established conventions of online politeness are called netiquette. Some conventions
vary from site to site or online medium to online medium; others are pretty standard
everywhere. Newbies are often unfamiliar with the conventional rules of netiquette and
sometimes embarrass themselves accordingly. Be sure not to send that incredibly
important e-mail message before reading about netiquette.
newbie
A newbie is a novice to the online world or computers in general.
news
Usenet news can generally be thought of as public e-mail as that is generally the way it
behaves. In reality, it is implemented by different software and is often accessed by
different programs. Different newsgroups adhere to different topics, and some are
"moderated", meaning that humans will try to manually remove off-topic posts,
especially spam. Most established newsgroups have a FAQ, and people are strongly
encouraged to read the FAQ prior to posting.
Newton
Although Newton is officially the name of the lightweight OS developed by Apple to run
on its MessagePad line of PDAs, it is often used to mean the MessagePads (and
compatible PDAs) themselves and thus the term "Newton OS" is often used for clarity.
The Newton OS is remarkably powerful; it is fully multitasking in spite of the fact that it
was designed for small machines. It is optimized for hand-held use, but will readily
transfer data to all manner of desktop machines. Historically it was the first PDA.
Recently Apple announced that it will discontinue further development of the Newton
platform, but will instead work to base future hand-held devices on either Mac OS or
Mac OS X with some effort dedicated to making the new devices capable of running
current Newton programs.
Newton book
Newton books provide all the functionality of ordinary books but add searching and
hypertext capabilities. The format was invented for the Newton to provide a means of
making volumes of data portable, and is particularly popular in the medical community as
most medical references are available as Newton books and carrying around a one pound
Newton is preferable to carrying around twenty pounds of books, especially when it
comes to looking up something. In addition to medical books, numerous references, most of the classics, and many contemporary works of fiction are available as Newton books.
Most fiction is available for free, most references cost money. Newton books are
somewhat more capable than the similar Palm DOC; both are specific types of eBooks.
Newton Script
A intepreted, object-oriented language for Newton MessagePad computers.
nybble
A nybble is half a byte, or four bits. It is a case of computer whimsy; it only stands to
reason that a small byte should be called a nybble. Some authors spell it with an "i"
instead of the "y", but the "y" is the original form.
object-oriented
While the specifics are well beyond the scope of this document, the term "objectoriented" applies to a philosophy of software creation. Often this philosophy is referred to
as object-oriented design (sometimes abbreviated as OOD), and programs written with it
in mind are referred to as object-oriented programs (often abbreviated OOP).
Programming languages designed to help facilitate it are called object-oriented languages
(sometimes abbreviated as OOL) and databases built with it in mind are called objectoriented databases (sometimes abbreviated as OODB or less fortunately OOD). The
general notion is that an object-oriented approach to creating software starts with
modeling the real-world problems trying to be solved in familiar real-world ways, and
carries the analogy all the way down to structure of the program. This is of course a great
over-simplification. Numerous object-oriented programming languages exist including:
Java, C++, Modula-2, Newton Script, and ADA.
Objective-C & ObjC
Objective-C (often called "ObjC" for short) is a compiled object-oriented language.
Based heavily on C, Objective-C is nearly as fast and can often be thought of as being
just C with added features. Note that it was developed independently of C++; its objectoriented extensions are more in the style of Smalltalk. It is however related to ObjectiveC++.
Objective-C++ & ObjC++
Objective-C++ (often called "ObjC++" for short) is a curious hybrid of Objective-C and
C++, allowing the syntax of both to coexist in the same source files.
office suite
An office suite is a collection of programs including at minimum a word processor,
spreadsheet, drawing program, and minimal database program. Some common office
suites include MS-Office, AppleWorks, ClarisWorks, GeoWorks, Applixware, Corel
Office, and StarOffice.
open source
Open source software goes one step beyond freeware. Not only does it provide the
software for free, it provides the original source code used to create the software. Thus,
curious users can poke around with it to see how it works, and advanced users can modify it to make it work better for them. By its nature, open souce software is pretty
well immune to all types of computer virus.
OpenBSD
A free variant of Berkeley UNIX available for Alpha, x86, 68xx, PA-RISC, SPARC, and
PowerPC based machines. Its emphasis is on security.
OpenDocument & ODF
OpenDocument (or ODF for short) is the suite of open, XML-based office suite
application formats defined by the OASIS consortium. It defines a platform-neutral, nonproprietary way of storing documents.
OpenGL
A low-level 3D graphics library with an emphasis on speed developed by SGI.
OS/2
OS/2 is the OS designed by IBM to run on x86 based machines. It is semi-compatible
with MS-Windows. IBM's more industrial strength OS is called AIX.
PA-RISC
The PA-RISC is a RISC processor developed by Hewlett-Packard. It is currently
produced only by HP. At the moment only one OS runs on PA-RISC based machines:
HP-UX. There is an effort underway to port Linux to them, though.
Palm DOC
Palm DOC files are quite similar to (but slightly less capable than) Newton books. They
were designed for Palm Pilots but can now be read on a couple other platforms, too. They
are a specific type of eBook.
Palm Pilot
The Palm Pilot (also called both just Palm and just Pilot, officially now just Palm) is the
most popular PDA currently in use. It is one of the least capable PDAs, but it is also one
of the smallest and least expensive. While not as full featured as many of the other PDAs
(such as the Newton) it performs what features it does have quite well and still remains
truly pocket-sized.
parallel
Loosely speaking, parallel implies a situation where multiple things can be done
simultaneously, like having multiple check-out lines each serving people all at once.
Parallel connections are by their nature more expensive than serial ones, but usually
faster. Also, in a related use of the word, often multitasking computers are said to be
capable of running multiple programs in parallel.
partition
Sometimes due to hardware limitations, disks have to be divided into smaller pieces.
These pieces are called partitions.
PascalNamed after the mathematician Blaise Pascal, Pascal is a language designed by Niklaus
Wirth originally in 1968 (and heavily revised in 1972) mostly for purposes of education
and training people how to write computer programs. It is a typically compiled language
but is still usually slower than C or FORTRAN. Wirth also created a more powerful
object-oriented Pascal-like language called Modula-2.
PC-DOS
The DOS produced by IBM designed to work like MS-DOS. Early versions of it bear
striking similarities to the earlier CP/M, but it utilizes simpler commands. It provides
only a CLI, but either Windows 3.1 or GEOS may be run on top of it to provide a GUI. It
only runs on x86 based machines.
PCMCIA
The Personal Computer Memory Card International Association is a standards body that
concern themselves with PC Card technology. Often the PC Cards themselves are
referred to as "PCMCIA cards". Frequently flash memory can be found in PC card form.
Perl
Perl is an interpreted language extremely popular for web applications.
PET
The Commodore PET (Personal Electronic Transactor) is an early (circa 1977-1980,
around the same time as the Apple][) home computer featuring a ROM-based BASIC
developed by Microsoft which it uses as a default "OS". It is based on the 65xx family of
processors and is the precursor to the VIC-20.
PETSCII
The PETSCII character set gets its name from "PET ASCII; it is a variant of the ASCII
character set originally developed for the Commodore PET that swaps the upper and
lower case characters and adds over a hundred graphic characters in addition to other
small changes. If you encounter some text that seems to have uppercase where lowercase
is expected and vice-versa, it is probably a PETSCII file.
PHP
Named with a recursive acronym (PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor), PHP provides a means
of creating web pages that dynamically modify themselves on the fly.
ping
Ping is a protocol designed to check across a network to see if a particular computer is
"alive" or not. Computers that recognize the ping will report back their status. Computers
that are down will not report back anything at all.
pixel
The smallest distinct point on a computer display is called a pixel.
plug-in
A plug-in is a piece of software designed not to run on its own but rather work in
cooperation with a separate application to increase that application's abilities. point
There are two common meanings for this word. The first is in the geometric sense; a
position in space without size. Of course as applied to computers it must take up some
space in practice (even if not in theory) and it is thus sometimes synonymous with pixel.
The other meaning is related most typically to fonts and regards size. The exact meaning
of it in this sense will unfortunately vary somewhat from person to person, but will often
mean 1/72 of an inch. Even when it does not exactly mean 1/72 of an inch, larger point
sizes always indicate larger fonts.
PowerPC
The PowerPC is a RISC processor developed in a collaborative effort between IBM,
Apple, and Motorola. It is currently produced by a few different companies, of course
including its original developers. A few different OSes run on PowerPC based machines,
including Mac OS, AIX, Solaris, Windows NT, Linux, Mac OS X, BeOS, and AmigaOS.
At any given time, the fastest processor in the world is usually either a PowerPC or an
Alpha, but sometimes SPARCs and PA-RISCs make the list, too.
proprietary
This simply means to be supplied by only one vendor. It is commonly misused.
Currently, most processors are non-proprietary, some systems are non-proprietary, and
every OS (except for arguably Linux) is proprietary.
protocol
A protocol is a means of communication used between computers. As long as both
computers recognize the same protocol, they can communicate without too much
difficulty over the same network or even via a simple direct modem connection
regardless whether or not they are themselves of the same type. This means that WinTel
boxes, Macs, Amigas, UNIX machines, etc., can all talk with one another provided they
agree on a common protocol first.
Psion
The Psion is a fairly popular brand of PDA. Generally, it is in between a Palm and a
Newton in capability. It runs the EPOC OS.
Python
Python is an interpreted, object-oriented language popular for Internet applications. It is
extremely portable with free versions existing for virtually every platform.
queue
A queue is a waiting list of things to be processed. Many computers provide printing
queues, for example. If something is being printed and the user requests that another item
be printed, the second item will sit in the printer queue until the first item finishes
printing at which point it will be removed from the queue and get printed itself.
QuickDraw
A high-level 3D graphics library with an emphasis on quick development time created by
Apple.
RAMRandom access memory is the short-term memory of a computer. Any information
stored in RAM will be lost if power goes out, but the computer can read from RAM far
more quickly than from a drive.
random access
Also called "dynamic access" this indicates that data can be selected without having to
skip over earlier data first. This is the way that a CD, record, laserdisc, or DVD will
behave -- it is easy to selectively play a particular track without having to fast forward
through earlier tracks. The other common behavior is called sequential access.
RDF
The Resource Description Framework is built upon an XML base and provides a more
modern means of accessing data from Internet resources. It can provide metadata
(including annotations) for web pages making (among other things) searching more
capable. It is also being used to refashion some existing formats like RSS and iCalendar;
in the former case it is already in place (at least for newer RSS versions), but it is still
experimental in the latter case.
real-time
Something that happens in real-time will keep up with the events around it and never give
any sort of "please wait" message.
Rexx
The Restructured Extended Executor is an interpreted language designed primarily to be
embedded in other applications in order to make them consistently programmable, but
also to be easy to learn and understand.
RISC
Reduced instruction set computing is one of the two main types of processor design in
use today, the other being CISC. The fastest processors in the world today are all RISC
designs. There are several popular RISC processors, including Alphas, ARMs, PARISCs, PowerPCs, and SPARCs.
robot
A robot (or 'bot for short) in the computer sense is a program designed to automate some
task, often just sending messages or collecting information. A spider is a type of robot
designed to traverse the web performing some task (usually collecting data).
robust
The adjective robust is used to describe programs that are better designed, have fewer
bugs, and are less likely to crash.
ROM
Read-only memory is similar to RAM only cannot be altered and does not lose its
contents when power is removed.
RSS
RSS stands for either Rich Site Summary, Really Simple Syndication, or RDF Site
Summary, depending upon whom you ask. The general idea is that it can provide brief summaries of articles that appear in full on a web site. It is well-formed XML, and newer
versions are even more specifically well-formed RDF.
Ruby
Ruby is an interpreted, object-oriented language. Ruby was fairly heavily influenced by
Perl, so people familiar with that language can typically transition to Ruby easily.
scanner
A scanner is a piece of hardware that will examine a picture and produce a computer file
that represents what it sees. A digital camera is a related device. Each has its own
limitations.
Scheme
Scheme is a typically interpreted computer language. It was created in 1975 in an attempt
to make Lisp simpler and more consistent. Scheme is a fairly portable language, but is
not particularly fast.
script
A script is a series of OS commands. The term "batch file" means much the same thing,
but is a bit dated. Typically the same sort of situations in which one would say DOS
instead of OS, it would also be appropriate to say batch file instead of script. Scripts can
be run like programs, but tend to perform simpler tasks. When a script is run, it is always
interpreted.
SCSI
Loosely speaking, a disk format sometimes used by MS-Windows, Mac OS, AmigaOS,
and (almost always) UNIX. Generally SCSI is superior (but more expensive) to IDE, but
it varies somewhat with system load and the individual SCSI and IDE components
themselves. The quick rundown is that: SCSI-I and SCSI-II will almost always
outperform IDE; EIDE will almost always outperform SCSI-I and SCSI-II; SCSI-III and
UltraSCSI will almost always outperform EIDE; and heavy system loads give an
advantage to SCSI. Note that although loosely speaking it is just a format difference, it is
deep down a hardware difference.
sequential access
This indicates that data cannot be selected without having to skip over earlier data first.
This is the way that a cassette or video tape will behave. The other common behavior is
called random access.
serial
Loosely speaking, serial implies something that has to be done linearly, one at a time, like
people being served in a single check-out line. Serial connections are by their nature less
expensive than parallel connections (including things like SCSI) but are typically slower.
server
A server is a computer designed to provide various services for an entire network. It is
typically either a workstation or a mainframe because it will usually be expected to
handle far greater loads than ordinary desktop systems. The load placed on servers also
necessitates that they utilize robust OSes, as a crash on a system that is currently being used by many people is far worse than a crash on a system that is only being used by one
person.
SGML
The Standard Generalized Mark-up Language provides an extremely generalized level of
mark-up. More common mark-up languages like HTML and XML are actually just
popular subsets of SGML.
shareware
Shareware is software made for profit that allows a trial period before purchase.
Typically shareware can be freely downloaded, used for a period of weeks (or sometimes
even months), and either purchased or discarded after it has been learned whether or not
it will satisfy the user's needs.
shell
A CLI designed to simplify complex OS commands. Some OSes (like AmigaOS, the
Hurd, and UNIX) have built-in support to make the concurrent use of multiple shells
easy. Common shells include the Korn Shell (ksh), the Bourne Shell (sh or bsh), the
Bourne-Again Shell, (bash or bsh), the C-Shell (csh), etc.
SIMM
A physical component used to add RAM to a computer. Similar to, but incompatible
with, DIMMs.
Smalltalk
Smalltalk is an efficient language for writing computer programs. Historically it is one of
the first object-oriented languages, and is not only used today in its pure form but shows
its influence in other languages like Objective-C.
Solaris
Solaris is the commercial variant of UNIX currently produced by Sun. It is an industrial
strength, nigh bulletproof, powerful multitasking OS that will run on SPARC, x86, and
PowerPC based machines.
spam
Generally spam is unwanted, unrequested e-mail or Usenet news. It is typically sent out
in bulk to huge address lists that were automatically generated by various robots
endlessly searching the Internet and newsgroups for things that resemble e-mail
addresses. The legality of spam is a topic of much debate; it is at best only borderline
legal, and spammers have been successfully persecuted in some states.
SPARC
The SPARC is a RISC processor developed by Sun. The design was more or less released
to the world, and it is currently produced by around a dozen different companies too
numerous to even bother mentioning. It is worth noting that even computers made by Sun
typically sport SPARCs made by other companies. A couple different OSes run on
SPARC based machines, including Solaris, SunOS, and Linux. Some of the newer
SPARC models are called UltraSPARCs. sprite
A sprite is a small MOB, usually implemented in hardware.
SunOS
SunOS is the commercial variant of UNIX formerly produced (but still supported) by
Sun.
SVG
Scalable Vector Graphics data is an XML file that is used to hold graphical data that can
be resized without loss of quality. SVG data can be kept in its own file, or even
embedded within a web page (although not all browsers are capable of displaying such
data).
Tcl/Tk
The Tool Command Language is a portable interpreted computer language designed to
be easy to use. Tk is a GUI toolkit for Tcl. Tcl is a fairly popular language for both
integrating existing applications and for creating Web applets (note that applets written in
Tcl are often called Tcklets). Tcl/Tk is available for free for most platforms, and plug-ins
are available to enable many browsers to play Tcklets.
TCP/IP
TCP/IP is a protocol for computer networks. The Internet is largely built on top of
TCP/IP (it is the more reliable of the two primary Internet Protocols -- TCP stands for
Transmission Control Protocol).
terminator
A terminator is a dedicated device used to mark the end of a device chain (as is most
typically found with SCSI devices). If such a chain is not properly terminated, weird
results can occur.
TEX
TEX (pronounced "tek") is a freely available, industrial strength typesetting program that
can be run on many different platforms. These qualities make it exceptionally popular in
schools, and frequently software developed at a university will have its documentation in
TEX format. TEX is not limited to educational use, though; many professional books
were typeset with TEX. TEX's primary drawback is that it can be quite difficult to set up
initially.
TrackBack
TrackBacks essentially provide a means whereby different web sites can post messages to
one another not just to inform each other about citations, but also to alert one another of
related resources. Typically, a blog may display quotations from another blog through the
use of TrackBacks.
UDP/IP
UDP/IP is a protocol for computer networks. It is the faster of the two primary Internet
Protocols. UDP stands for User Datagram Protocol.
UnicodeThe Unicode character set is a superset of the ASCII character set with provisions made
for handling international symbols and characters from other languages. Unicode is
sixteen bit, so takes up roughly twice the space as simple ASCII, but is correspondingly
more flexible.
UNIX
UNIX is a family of OSes, each being made by a different company or organization but
all offering a very similar look and feel. It can not quite be considered non-proprietary,
however, as the differences between different vendor's versions can be significant (it is
still generally possible to switch from one vendor's UNIX to another without too much
effort; today the differences between different UNIXes are similar to the differences
between the different MS-Windows; historically there were two different UNIX camps,
Berkeley / BSD and AT&T / System V, but the assorted vendors have worked together to
minimize the differences). The free variant Linux is one of the closest things to a current,
non-proprietary OS; its development is controlled by a non-profit organization and its
distribution is provided by several companies. UNIX is powerful; it is fully multitasking
and can do pretty much anything that any OS can do (look to the Hurd if you need a more
powerful OS). With power comes complexity, however, and UNIX tends not to be overly
friendly to beginners (although those who think UNIX is difficult or cryptic apparently
have not used CP/M). Window managers are available for UNIX (running under XWindows) and once properly configured common operations will be almost as simple on
a UNIX machine as on a Mac. Out of all the OSes in current use, UNIX has the greatest
range of hardware support. It will run on machines built around many different
processors. Lightweight versions of UNIX have been made to run on PDAs, and in the
other direction, full featured versions make full advantage of all the resources on large,
multi-processor machines. Some different UNIX versions include Solaris, Linux, IRIX,
AIX, SunOS, FreeBSD, Digital UNIX, HP-UX, NetBSD, OpenBSD, etc.
upload
To upload a file is to copy it from your computer to a remote computer. The opposite is
download.
UPS
An uninterrupted power supply uses heavy duty batteries to help smooth out its input
power source.
URI
A Uniform Resource Identifier is basically just a unique address for almost any type of
resource. It is similar to but more general than a URL; in fact, it may also be a URN.
URL
A Uniform Resource Locator is basically just an address for a file that can be given to a
browser. It starts with a protocol type (such as http, ftp, or gopher) and is followed by a
colon, machine name, and file name in UNIX style. Optionally an octothorpe character
"#" and arguments will follow the file name; this can be used to further define position
within a page and perform a few other tricks. Similar to but less general than a URI.
URNA Uniform Resource Name is basically just a unique address for almost any type of
resource unlike a URL it will probably not resolve with a browser.
USB
A really fast type of serial port that offers many of the best features of SCSI without the
price. Faster than many types of parallel port, a single USB port is capable of chaining
many devices without the need of a terminator. USB is much slower (but somewhat less
expensive) than FireWire.
uucode
The point of uucode is to allow 8-bit binary data to be transferred through the more
common 7-bit ASCII channels (most especially e-mail). The facilities for dealing with
uucoded files exist for many different machine types, and the most common programs are
called "uuencode" for encoding the original binary file into a 7-bit file and "uudecode"
for restoring the original binary file from the encoded one. Sometimes different uuencode
and uudecode programs will work in subtly different manners causing annoying
compatibility problems. Bcode was invented to provide the same service as uucode but to
maintain a tighter standard.
variable width
As applied to a font, variable width means that different characters will have different
widths as appropriate. For example, an "i" will take up much less space than an "m". The
opposite of variable width is fixed width. The terms "proportional width" and
"proportionally spaced" mean the same thing as variable width. Some common variable
width fonts include Times, Helvetica, and Bookman.
VAX
The VAX is a computer platform developed by Digital. Its plural is VAXen. VAXen are
large expensive machines that were once quite popular in large businesses; today modern
UNIX workstations have all the capability of VAXen but take up much less space. Their
OS is called VMS.
vector
This term has two common meanings. The first is in the geometric sense: a vector defines
a direction and magnitude. The second concerns the formatting of fonts and images. If a
font is a vector font or an image is a vector image, it is defined as lines of relative size
and direction rather than as collections of pixels (the method used in bitmapped fonts and
images). This makes it easier to change the size of the font or image, but puts a bigger
load on the device that has to display the font or image. The term "outline font" means
the same thing as vector font.
Veronica & Veronica2
Although traditionally written as a proper name, Veronica is actually an acronym for
"very easy rodent-oriented netwide index to computerized archives", where the "rodent"
refers to gopher. The acronym was obviously a little forced to go along with the preexisting (and now largely unused) Archie, in order to have a little fun with a comic book
reference. Regardless, Veronica (or these days more likely Veronica2) is essentially a
search engine for gopher resources. VIC-20
The Commodore VIC-20 computer sold millions of units and is generally considered to
have been the first affordable home computer. It features a ROM-based BASIC and uses
it as a default "OS". It is based on the 65xx family of processors. VIC (in case you are
wondering) can stand for either video interface c or video interface computer. The VIC-
20 is the precursor to the C64/128.
virtual machine
A virtual machine is a machine completely defined and implemented in software rather
than hardware. It is often referred to as a "runtime environment"; code compiled for such
a machine is typically called bytecode.
virtual memory
This is a scheme by which disk space is made to substitute for the more expensive RAM
space. Using it will often enable a computer to do things it could not do without it, but it
will also often result in an overall slowing down of the system. The concept of swap
space is very similar.
virtual reality
Virtual reality (often called VR for short) is generally speaking an attempt to provide
more natural, human interfaces to software. It can be as simple as a pseudo 3D interface
or as elaborate as an isolated room in which the computer can control the user's senses of
vision, hearing, and even smell and touch.
virus
A virus is a program that will seek to duplicate itself in memory and on disks, but in a
subtle way that will not immediately be noticed. A computer on the same network as an
infected computer or that uses an infected disk (even a floppy) or that downloads and
runs an infected program can itself become infected. A virus can only spread to
computers of the same platform. For example, on a network consisting of a WinTel box,
a Mac, and a Linux box, if one machine acquires a virus the other two will probably still
be safe. Note also that different platforms have different general levels of resistance;
UNIX machines are almost immune, Win '95 / '98 / ME / XP is quite vulnerable, and
most others lie somewhere in between.
VMS
The industrial strength OS that runs on VAXen.
VoIP
VoIP means "Voice over IP" and it is quite simply a way of utilizing the Internet (or even
in some cases intranets) for telephone conversations. The primary motivations for doing
so are cost and convenience as VoIP is significantly less expensive than typical telephone
long distance packages, plus one high speed Internet connection can serve for multiple
phone lines.
VRML
A Virtual Reality Modeling Language file is used to represent VR objects. It has
essentially been superseded by X3D. W3C
The World Wide Web Consortium (usually abbreviated W3C) is a non-profit, advisory
body that makes suggestions on the future direction of the World Wide Web, HTML,
CSS, and browsers.
Waba
An extremely lightweight subset of Java optimized for use on PDAs.
WebDAV
WebDAV stands for Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning, and is designed
to provide a way of editing Web-based resources in place. It serves as a more modern
(and often more secure) replacement for FTP in many cases.
WebTV
A WebTV box hooks up to an ordinary television set and displays web pages. It will not
display them as well as a dedicated computer.
window manager
A window manager is a program that acts as a graphical go-between for a user and an
OS. It provides a GUI for the OS. Some OSes incorporate the window manager into their
own internal code, but many do not for reasons of efficiency. Some OSes partially make
the division. Some common true window managers include CDE (Common Desktop
Environment), OpenWindows, Motif, FVWM, GNOME, and Enlightenment. Some
common hybrid window managers with OS extensions include Windows ME, Windows
98, Windows 95, Windows 3.1, OS/2 and GEOS.
Windows '95
Windows '95 is currently the second most popular variant of MS-Windows. It was
designed to be the replacement Windows 3.1 but has not yet done so completely partly
because of suspected security problems but even more because it is not as lightweight and
will not work on all the machines that Windows 3.1 will. It is more capable than
Windows 3.1 though and now has excellent driver support and more games available for
it than any other platform. It is made to run on top of MS-DOS and will not do much of
anything if MS-DOS is not on the system. It is thus not strictly an OS per se, but nor is it
a true window manager either; rather the combination of MS-DOS and Windows '95
result in a full OS with GUI. It is partially multitasking but has a much greater chance of
crashing than Windows NT does (or probably even Mac OS) if faced with a buggy
program. Windows '95 runs only on x86 based machines. Currently Windows '95 has
several Y2K issues, some of which have patches that can be downloaded for free, and
some of which do not yet have fixes at all.
Windows '98
Windows '98 is quite possibly the second most popular form of MS-Windows, in spite of
the fact that its official release is currently a point of legal debate with at least nineteen
states, the federal government, and a handful of foreign countries as it has a few
questionable features that might restrict the novice computer user and/or unfairly
compete with other computer companies. It also has some specific issues with the version
of Java that comes prepackaged with it that has never been adequately fixed, and it still has several Y2K issues, most of which have patches that can be downloaded for free (in
fact, Microsoft guarantees that it will work properly through 2000 with the proper
patches), but some of which do not yet have fixes at all (it won't work properly through
2001 at this point). In any case, it was designed to replace Windows '95.
Windows 2000
Windows 2000 was the intended replacement for Windows NT and in that capacity
received relatively lukewarm support. Being based on Windows NT, it inherits some of
its driver support problems. Originally it was also supposed to replace Windows '98, but
Windows ME was made to do that instead, and the merger between Windows NT and
Windows '98 was postponed until Windows XP.
Windows 3.1
Windows 3.1 remains a surprisingly popular variant of MS-Windows. It is lighter weight
than either Windows '95 or Windows NT (but not lighter weight than GEOS) but less
capable than the other two. It is made to run on top of MS-DOS and will not do much of
anything if MS-DOS is not on the system. It is thus not strictly an OS per se, but nor is it
a true window manager, either; rather the combination of MS-DOS and Windows 3.1
result in a full OS with GUI. Its driver support is good, but its game selection is limited.
Windows 3.1 runs only on x86 based machines. It has some severe Y2K issues that may
or may not be fixed.
Windows CE
Windows CE is the lightweight variant of MS-Windows. It offers the general look and
feel of Windows '95 but is targeted primarily for hand-held devices, PDAs, NCs, and
embedded devices. It does not have all the features of either Windows '95 or Windows
NT and is very different from Windows 3.1. In particular, it will not run any software
made for any of the other versions of MS-Windows. Special versions of each program
must be made. Furthermore, there are actually a few slightly different variants of
Windows CE, and no variant is guaranteed to be able to run software made specifically
for another one. Driver support is also fairly poor for all types, and few games are made
for it. Windows CE will run on a few different processor types, including the x86 and
several different processors dedicated to PDAs, embedded systems, and hand-held
devices.
Windows ME
Windows ME is yet another flavor of MS-Windows (specifically the planned
replacement for Windows '98). Windows ME currently runs only on the x86 processor.
Windows NT
Windows NT is the industrial-strength variant of MS-Windows. Current revisions offer
the look and feel of Windows '95 and older revisions offer the look and feel of Windows
3.1. It is the most robust flavor of MS-Windows and is fully multitasking. It is also by far
the most expensive flavor of MS-Windows and has far less software available for it than
Windows '95 or '98. In particular, do not expect to play many games on a Windows NT
machine, and expect some difficulty in obtaining good drivers. Windows NT will run on
a few different processor types, including the x86, the Alpha, and the PowerPC. Plans are
in place to port Windows NT to the Merced when it becomes available. Windows Vista
Windows Vista is the newest flavor of MS-Windows (specifically the planned
replacement for Windows XP). Windows Vista (originally known as Longhorn) currently
only runs on x86 processors.
Windows XP
Windows XP is yet another flavor of MS-Windows (specifically the planned replacement
for both Windows ME and Windows 2000). Windows XP currently only runs on the x86
processors. Windows XP is currently the most popular form of MS-Windows.
WinTel
An x86 based system running some flavor of MS-Windows.
workstation
Depending upon whom you ask, a workstation is either an industrial strength desktop
computer or its own category above the desktops. Workstations typically have some
flavor of UNIX for their OS, but there has been a recent trend to call high-end Windows
NT and Windows 2000 machines workstations, too.
WYSIWYG
What you see is what you get; an adjective applied to a program that attempts to exactly
represent printed output on the screen. Related to WYSIWYM but quite different.
WYSIWYM
What you see is what you mean; an adjective applied to a program that does not attempt
to exactly represent printed output on the screen, but rather defines how things are used
and so will adapt to different paper sizes, etc. Related to WYSIWYG but quite different.
X-Face
X-Faces are small monochrome images embedded in headers for both provides a e-mail
and news messages. Better mail and news applications will display them (sometimes
automatically, sometimes only per request).
X-Windows
X-Windows provides a GUI for most UNIX systems, but can also be found as an add-on
library for other computers. Numerous window managers run on top of it. It is often just
called "X".
X3D
Extensible 3D Graphics data is an XML file that is used to hold three-dimensional
graphical data. It is the successor to VRML.
x86
The x86 series of processors includes the Pentium, Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III,
Celeron, and Athlon as well as the 786, 686, 586, 486, 386, 286, 8086, 8088, etc. It is an
exceptionally popular design (by far the most popular CISC series) in spite of the fact
that even its fastest model is significantly slower than the assorted RISC processors.
Many different OSes run on machines built around x86 processors, including MS-DOS,
Windows 3.1, Windows '95, Windows '98, Windows ME, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows CE, Windows XP, GEOS, Linux, Solaris, OpenBSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD, Mac
OS X, OS/2, BeOS, CP/M, etc. A couple different companies produce x86 processors,
but the bulk of them are produced by Intel. It is expected that this processor will
eventually be completely replaced by the Merced, but the Merced development schedule
is somewhat behind. Also, it should be noted that the Pentium III processor has stirred
some controversy by including a "fingerprint" that will enable individual computer usage
of web pages etc. to be accurately tracked.
XBL
An XML Binding Language document is used to associate executable content with an
XML tag. It is itself an XML file, and is used most frequently (although not exclusively)
in conjunction with XUL.
XHTML
The Extensible Hypertext Mark-up Language is essentially a cleaner, stricter version of
HTML. It is a proper subset of XML.
XML
The Extensible Mark-up Language is a subset of SGML and a superset of XHTML. It is
used for numerous things including (among many others) RSS and RDF.
XML-RPC
XML-RPC provides a fairly lightweight means by which one computer can execute a
program on a co-operating machine across a network like the Internet. It is based on
XML and is used for everything from fetching stock quotes to checking weather
forecasts.
XSL
The Extensible Stylesheet Language is like CSS for XML. It provides a means of
describing how an XML resource should be displayed.
XSLT
XSL Transformations are used to transform one type of XML into another. It is a
component of XSL that can be (and often is) used independently.
XUL
An XML User-Interface Language document is used to define a user interface for an
application using XML to specify the individual controls as well as the overall layout.
Y2K
The general class of problems resulting from the wrapping of computers' internal date
timers is given this label in honor of the most obvious occurrence -- when the year
changes from 1999 to 2000 (abbreviated in some programs as 99 to 00 indicating a
backwards time movement). Contrary to popular belief, these problems will not all
manifest themselves on the first day of 2000, but will in fact happen over a range of dates
extending out beyond 2075. A computer that does not have problems prior to the
beginning of 2001 is considered "Y2K compliant", and a computer that does not have
problems within the next ten years or so is considered for all practical purposes to be
"Y2K clean". Whether or not a given computer is "clean" depends upon both its OS and its applications (and in some unfortunate cases, its hardware). The quick rundown on
common home / small business machines (roughly from best to worst) is that:
All Mac OS systems are okay until at least the year 2040. By that time a patch
should be available.
All BeOS systems are okay until the year 2040 (2038?). By that time a patch
should be available.
Most UNIX versions are either okay or currently have free fixes available (and
typically would not have major problems until 2038 or later in any case).
NewtonOS has a problem with the year 2010, but has a free fix available.
Newer AmigaOS systems are okay; older ones have a problem with the year 2000
but have a free fix available. They also have a year 2077 problem that does not
yet have a free fix.
Some OS/2 systems have a year 2000 problem, but free fixes are available.
All CP/M versions have a year 2000 problem, but free fixes are available.
PC-DOS has a year 2000 problem, but a free fix is available.
DR-DOS has a year 2000 problem, but a free fix is available.
Different versions of GEOS have different problems ranging from minor year
2000 problems (with fixes in the works) to larger year 2080 problems (that do not
have fixes yet). The only problem that may not have a fix in time is the year 2000
problem on the Apple ][ version of GEOS; not only was that version discontinued,
unlike the other GEOS versions it no longer has a parent company to take care of
it.
All MS-Windows versions (except possibly Windows 2000 and Windows ME)
have multiple problems with the year 2000 and/or 2001, most of which have free
fixes but some of which still lack free fixes as of this writing. Even new machines
off the shelf that are labeled "Y2K Compliant" usually are not unless additional
software is purchased and installed. Basically WinNT and WinCE can be properly
patched, Windows '98 can be patched to work properly through 2000 (possibly
not 2001), Windows '95 can be at least partially patched for 2000 (but not 2001)
but is not being guaranteed by Microsoft, and Windows 3.1 cannot be fully
patched.
MS-DOS has problems with at least the year 2000 (and probably more). None of
its problems have been addressed as of this writing. Possible fixes are to change
over to either PC-DOS or DR-DOS.
Results vary wildly for common applications, so it is better to be safe than sorry and
check out the ones that you use. It should also be noted that some of the biggest expected
Y2K problems will be at the two ends of the computer spectrum with older legacy
mainframes (such as power some large banks) and some of the various tiny embedded
computers (such as power most burglar alarms and many assorted appliances). Finally, it
should also be mentioned that some older WinTel boxes and Amigas may have Y2K
problems in their hardware requiring a card addition or replacement.
Z-Machine
A virtual machine optimized for running interactive fiction, interactive tutorials, and
other interactive things of a primarily textual nature. Z-Machines have been ported to almost every platform in use today. Z-machine bytecode is usually called Z-code. The
Glulx virtual machine is of the same idea but somewhat more modern in concept.
Z80
The Z80 series of processors is a CISC design and is not being used in too many new
stand-alone computer systems, but can still be occasionally found in embedded systems.
It is the most popular processor for CP/M machines.
Zaurus
The Zaurus is a brand of PDA. It is generally in between a Palm and a Newton in
capability.
zip
There are three common zips in the computer world that are completely different from
one another. One is a type of removable removable disk slightly larger (physically) and
vastly larger (capacity) than a floppy. The second is a group of programs used for running
interactive fiction. The third is a group of programs used for compression.
Zoomer
The Zoomer is a type of PDA. Zoomers all use GEOS for their OS and are / were
produced by numerous different companies and are thus found under numerous different
names. The "classic" Zoomers are known as the Z-7000, the Z-PDA, and the GRiDpad
and were made by Casio, Tandy, and AST respectively. Newer Zoomers include HP's
OmniGo models, Hyundai's Gulliver (which may not have actually been released to the
general public), and Nokia's Communicator line of PDA / cell phone hybrids.
Source: www.saugus.net