Glossary
active matrix
display
A
type of flat-panel display found on most of today's laptop
computers. Active matrix technology differs from
"passive matrix" only in that the screen is
refreshed more frequently, creating much better picture
quality with better viewing angles. The most common type of
active matrix screen is called TFT (or "thin film
transfer"). The two terms are often used synonymously.
AGP
(abbreviation
for "Accelerated Graphics Port") A new type of
dedicated PC graphics bus designed by Intel Corp to more
efficiently render 3D graphics. The AGP can transfer data at
a rate up to 528MB/sec. By comparison, the more common PCI
(Peripheral Component Interconnect) bus, used in Pentium and
Mac machines, has a maximum transfer rate of 132MB/sec.
AGP's big bandwidth allows games and 3D apps to use more
realistically-rendered textures and faster frame rates and
to store this data in system, instead of video, memory. This
reduces the performance hit to the system as graphics are
presented. See also bus and PCI.
all-in-one
Increasingly
popular office machines that combine a printer, scanner,
photocopier and fax machine in one unit.
Alpha Channel
In
computer graphics, a portion of each pixel's data that is
reserved for transparency information. 32-bit graphics
systems contain four channels -- three 8-bit channels for
red, green, and blue (RGB) and one 8-bit alpha channel. The
alpha channel is really a mask -- it specifies how the
pixel's colors should be merged with another pixel when the
two are overlaid, one on top of the other.
AMR
[Abbreviation
for "Audio Modem Riser"] An Intel specification
for analog I/O (Input/Output) functions on motherboards. An
AMR card removes analog I/O functions from the motherboard,
relegating them to a plug-in "riser card" (a.k.a.
a "daughter board"). By doing this, motherboard
manufacturing is not restrained by the FCC and International
Telecom certification processes which can often get bogged
down in red tape.
AMPS
[Abbreviated
as "Advanced Mobile Phone Service"] The analog
cellular phone standard first introduced by AT&T in
1983. AMPS phones operate in the 800 to 900 Megahertz (MHz)
radio spectrum. The term is "cell" phone because
the signals are sent from radio transmitters that cover a
broadcast area known as a cell.
API
[abbreviation
for "Application Program Interface"] A series of
software routines and development tools that comprise an
interface between a computer application and lower-level
services and functions (e.g. the operating system, device
drivers, and other low-level software). APIs serve as
building blocks for programmers putting together software
applications. Sometimes "Application Programming
Interface."
ASP
[Abbreviation
for "Application Service Provider"] A growing
number of "apps-on-tap" websites where
applications are available for rent. Asps allow small
businesses to have access to programs and services that they
might not otherwise be able to afford on their local area
network.
ATA
[Abbreviation
for "for "Advanced Technology Attachment"]
ATA is the common disk drive technology that puts the drive
controller right on the drive itself. The are a number of
ATA versions, from the original a.k.a. IDE) to the 33MBps
ATA-33 (a.k.a. Ultra-ATA) to the newest standard, ATA-66
which operates at 66MBps.
Athlon
The
name of AMD's new chip intended to compete with Intel's
Pentium III. The Athlon was formerly referred to as the K7.
The September '99 issue of PC World claims that the 600MHz
Athlon is on average 9% faster than a 600MHz PIII. In
graphics tests, the Athlon was 21% faster running 3D
modeling software. For comparisons and benchmarks, see AMD's
Athlon page.
ATVEF
[Abbreviation
for "Advanced Television Enhancement Forum"] A
consortium of computer, cable and television companies that
are developing an HTML-like standard for the delivery of
computer data via TV signals. Right now, services like IBM's
Intercast use the "Vertical Blanking Interval" on
an analog TV signal. This is the part of the signal that's
used to transmit closed captioning and emergency data. VBI
has proven too limited for all but the most basic Internet
content delivery. ATVEF hopes to develop a more
high-bandwidth solution.
audio homesteading
Using
a free audio website (such as www.live365.com) and webcasting tools to
set up your own Net radio station.
backhoe-induced Deep Fade
[Slang]
One of many terms used in the wired world to refer to a day
when the network is down (think: digital age snow day).
Other terms are "backhoe day" and the verb "backhoed"
(as in "the network has been backhoed.") Probably
based on one or more real situations where a backhoe sliced
through a network trunk.
backplane
A
backplane is a printed circuit board in an electronics
device with sockets into which other circuit boards can be
plugged. In your PC, the backplane is the large board that
contains the ISA, PCI and other sockets for modem, video,
sound and other expansion cards. Sometimes used synonymously
with motherboard.
bid shielding
[slang]
On an online auction, when two bidders pull the following
scam: one bids low, the other very high, which discourages
other bidders. Seconds before the auction ends, the high bid
is retracted and the low bidder wins by default.
BIOS
[Abbreviation
for "Basic Input/Output System"] The BIOS is the
root software in a PC that contains all of the basic code
for controlling drives, keyboard, monitor, mouse, comm
ports, etc. The BIOS acts as a bridge between the hardware
and the operating system. The BIOS resides on a ROM chip so
that your computer can continue to function even after a
disk failure. To learn more, see PC Guide's BIOS reference
page.
blog
[slang]
Short for "WeBLOG." A Weblog is a type of website
that uses a dated log format for the building its content.
Weblogs (or blogs) are usually moderated by a single person
who creates the material themselves, edits submissions from
contributors, gleans material from elsewhere on the Net, or
a combination of all three. One of the most common blog
sites is the news for nerds mecca Slash Dot.
Bluetooth
Bluetooth
is an open standard for short-range wireless communications
being developed by a cooperative of mobile phone, computer
and PDA manufacturers. The standard would allow all of your
(Bluetooth-compliant) personal tech devices to talk to each
other. The first Bluetooth-compliant products are supposed
to make their appearance by the end of 1999. For more info,
see the Bluetooth
website.
brain fart
[Slang]
1. The result of mental indigestion (a "braino" in
hacker slang) when switching from one activity to another
that causes one to make an embarrassing mistake. Trying to
fast-forward a real-time TV program after watching a
videotape would be an example of a brain fart. 2. A burst of
useful information that's the byproduct of a bloated mind.
"Can you give me a brain fart on the theory of the Big
Crunch?"
browser safe colors
There
are only 216 colors in the common 256-color display palette
that are rendered the exact same way on both Mac and PC
operating systems. These are called "browser safe
colors" (or the "browser safe palette"). You
need to use these colors if you want your Web graphics and
colored elements to look consistent on both platforms. Read
a Street Tech review on a cool browser safe palette mousepad.
bus
Think
of a computer bus as sort of a highway (to mix a metaphor)
through your computer on which data travels. Buses carry
data between the microrocessor, disk drive controllers,
memory and peripheral ports. Buses have several sets of
"lanes" (if you will), one for carrying data,
another for carrying memory addresses on where to find the
data, and another for carrying control signals for
regulating the the devices and processes connected to the
bus.
B2B
[Abbreviation
for "Business to Business"] The term
"B2B" is showing up a lot these says, as business
to business ecommerce is touted as the next great Net
revolution. "B2C" stands for "business to
consumers."
cache
[pronounced
"cash"] A form of high-speed storage that can be
either a section of main memory (as in "memory
caching") or an independent storage device ("disk
caching"). Memory caching is effective because most
programs access the same data or instructions over and over
again. By storing this information in cache memory, overall
data processing speed is improved. Level 2 (L2) cache, which
is common in many of today's computers, is usually located
on a second chip between the main computer processor and the
DRAM.
CDPD
[abbreviation
for "Cellular Digital Packet Data"] A wireless
radio frequency (RF) communication service that can deliver
data packets over existing cellular phone networks that have
been upgrading for CDPD. CDPD is capable of transfer speeds
of up to 19.2 KBPS. The CDPD packets are actually sent
between pauses in the cellular phone conversations. CDPD
cellular modem service is currently available in about 65 US
cities.
chatterbot
A
chatterbot is a software program that runs in a chat room or
on a Web page and is designed to simulate a human
conversant. Chatterbots are common in the online text-based
gaming environments known as Tinymuds. A nice chatterbot fan
page can be found here.
Circuit-Switched Cellular
A
system for transfering modem data over a conventional analog
cellular network that has not been updated for CDPD
communication. See CDPD.
ClearType
ClearType
is a new font technology that Microsoft is developing. Mr.
Bill and Bill Hill (the creator of ClearType) claim that it
will make future screens as easy to read as print books and
will spark a revolution in e-books. ClearType works by using
complicated algorithms to render characters more sharpely by
adding red, green and blue subelements. For more info see
MS's ClearType
page
CLEC
[Abbreviation
for "Competitive Local Exchange Carrier"] A
telecom company that is in competition with the local Bell
(or other) telephone company. The term was coined after the
1996 Telecommunications Act which deregulated the telecom
industry. CLECS include cable companies, ISPs, cellular
providers and others.
coaxial cable
Type
of cable used for cable TV, UHF/VHF TV antennas, ham and
scanner radio hook-ups. Coax was also the standard for data
networks such as Ethernet and IBM's 3270 terminals (now
being replaced by fiber optics). Coax is a round
two-conductor cable with a single solid center wire (or
stranded conductor) surrounded by a braided or foil
conductor (which is usually grounded). Both conductors share
the same axis, thus the name coaxial. Coax has a
characteristic impedance (expressed in Ohms). Coax cable is
rate with an RG prefix (old military jargon for "Radio
Guide" and followed by the cable type (expressed in a
number) and the suffix "/U" if it's a general
ultility cable (as opposed to special application coax made
of different material, designed for shorter runs, etc.).
RG-6/U coax is a 75 Ohms cable designed for internal wiring
of cable and antenna television. RG-59/U coax is a 75 Ohms
cable commonly used in video transmission, and CB, Ham radio
and TV antennas.
CompactFlash Card
Compact
Flash cards are smaller, more durable and can hold more data
than other types of flash memory cards. CompactFlash cards
are also about one-third the size of a PC card and can be
used ub Type I & II PC card slots with an adapter. One
thing that distinguishes CompactFlash cards is that they
have their own controller onboard so that cameras, PDAs and
other devices that use the cards are not burdened with the
controller software. CompactFlash cards comes is sizes from
2MB to 64MB. See PC Card and SmartMedia Card.
content-aware switches
A
new generation of network switching technology that can
actually make decisions about prioritizing net traffic. This
technology, also called "smart switches," are
especially useful on intranets and extranets where real-time
decisions can be made about getting mission-critical apps
and data through the pipeline faster.
convergence networks
Internet-based
networks that deliver voice, data and video over the same
network. Cisco's Voice, Video and Integrated Data system (AVVID)
is already on the market, but so far, adoption is slow
(given some industry reluctance and the money alreay
invested in separate voice and data nets).
copyleft
One
of the backbone concepts of the open source software
movement is the idea of copyleft. Coined by the Free Software
Foundation, copyleft stipulates that a piece of software
can be freely distributed and modified as long as a copyleft
statement travels with it that tells others they can freely
distribute and modify the software code as long as they keep
it open to distribution and modification (and keep the
copyleft statement on it).
culprit zero
The
person responsible for initiating an online media prank,
phony virus warning or email chain letter. As you might
imagine, tracking down culprit zero can be next to
impossible.
data coolie
[Slang]
A third world programmer who will work for much less money
than an equivalent US programmer.
daughter window
A
smaller browser window that pops up when you hit a Web page.
Daughter windows are used to present ads, news, special
promotions and site indexes. They first became popular with
adult websites, but can now be found everywhere.
dead media
Cyberpunk
hero Bruce Sterling began the Dead Media Project in 1995 to
catalog all of media's dodo birds, those technologies that
have fallen by the wayside. He and fellow sci-fi author
Richard Kadrey moderate a mailing list of "dead media
necronauts" who collective research and catalog lost
but not forgotten media tech. Sterling is writing a book on
his findings. Check one of the Dead
Media archives.
deep linking
The
practice of hyperlinking to pages on a site other than the
front page of a site. Deep linking has become a
controversial practice, thanks to the hyper-greedy
Ticketmaster, who says deep linking bypasses the front page
advertising on their site, cutting into their ad revenue.
They are pushing for the practice of "consensual
linking" only.
Dell
[Slang]
To beat a competitor by eliminating the middleman and
selling directly to customers. "Some analysts have
warned that "Delling" could spread to the car,
chemicals and banking sectors."
digital video recorders
A
new breed of digital recording technology that compresses
and records TV programming onto a hard disk. The first two
manufacturers of DVRs are TiVo and ReplayTV. One unique
feature of DVRs allows you to save a show you're watching
from the beginning even if you decide to record it mid-way.
DVR recordings are meant to be watched and then erased or
transfered to a VCR for later playback.
DIP Switches
[abbreviation
for "Dual Inline Package"] Small switches found on
motherboards and other computer devices. By turning the
switches on or off, the user can select different operating
options. See also SIMM.
DirectX
An
MS Windows program that allows applications to
"talk" directly to graphics and audio hardware.
dot-com
[Slang]
Previously used as a way of indicating the period (.) and
top level (COMmercial) domain of a Web address,
"dot-com" has suddenly become a way of describing
Internet-based businesses. "Did you see how the dot-com
stocks are going crazy?" Please, make it stop!
DRDRAM
[abbreviation
for "Direct RAMbus Dynamic Random Access Memory"]
The next generation of RAM technology debuting later this
year ('99). DRDRAM draws less power (almost a third less
than SDRAM), has clock speeds of up to a dizzying 800MHz,
allows for multiple channels of memory for up to four
parallel banks of RAM, and a data path that's twice as wide
as existing SDRAM (two bytes instead of one). All this
translates to RAM performance that should be at least three
times faster than existing memory technology.
DSP
[Abbreviation
for "Digital Signal Processor"] A microprocessor
that specializes in calculations related to translating
analog signals into digital ones. DSPs are used in audio and
video compression, voice processing, modems, hearing aids,
seismic sensors, anyplace where rapid analog to digital
conversion and signal clarification is required.
DVD
[abbreviation
for "Digital Video (or Verastile) Disc"] An
improved CD-ROM-like technology that can fit between 4.7GB
to 17GB of multimedia data on a single disc. DVD is
"backwards compatible" with CD-ROMs so you can
play your old audio CDs and CD-ROMs on DVD drives. The
latest version of DVD, called DVD-2 (or DVDII), can also
read CD-R (Recordable) and CD-RW (Re-Writable) discs.
e-cinema
The
next generation of cinema will be digital, not analog.
E-cinema films will be delivered over high-speed data
networks or via removable media to movie theaters. While
e-cinema is exciting from a technical standpoint (no data
loss through printing, no scratches and pops, no print
costs), it raises big questions: who will pay for the new
digital theaters? what does it mean for independents? etc.
Geo. Lucas says that Star Wars Episode II will likely be an
all-digital film.
E-Factor
What
cyberpundit Michael Wolf calls the new strategy,
increasingly found in all forms of business, where
regardless of the product or service, you have to use
entertainment and show-biz antics to get your customer's
attention.
EIDE
[abbreviation
for "Enhanced Integrated Device Electronics"]
Refers to a type of disk drive standard where the controller
for the device is part of the device itself, eliminating the
need for a separate adapter card. EIDE adds features onto
the older IDE standard, such as larger capacity (up to
8.4GB), faster access times, and burst transfer (large
chunks of data at once).
8-second Rule
Rule-of-thumb
for the maximum amount of time it should take for a site's
front page to load.
EPOC
If
it's not the PalmOS and not WinCE, it's probably EPOC, an
operating system developed in Europe for handheld computers.
First used on the popular Psion H/PC's, EPOC is being
adopted by a number of developers of other handheld devices,
Net phones, Net appliances.
e-speak
Hewlett-Packard's
answer to Java. E-speak actually sits on top of Java and is
cross-platform compatable. Unlike Java, e-speak is designed
to be easy to use so that non-programming Web developers can
create applications and Web services via a graphical
interface. For more info, check out HP's e-speak home page.
e-Stamp
An
online postage service and stamp printing device recently
approved for use by the US Postal Service. Users will have a
small "electric vault" that attaches to their
printer. Postage is purchased online, either as needed or in
an amount to be stored in the vault for later use. So far,
e-Stamps only work with a few envelope printing-capable
programs, most of them Microsoft products (who, surprise, is
one of e-Stamp's partners!). For more details, see the e-Stamp site.
e-support
The
delivery of tech support services directly to a computer
over the Internet. Dell recently rolled out its OpenManage
Resolution Assistant, a technology that can monitor
customer's PowerEdge servers and correct problems as they
arise. If the program is successful, they will begin
offering it to the desktop as well. One obvious hurdle for
e-support is the significant security issues.
Ethernet
A
popular type of local area network (LAN) developed by Xerox
in 1976 and common in many of today's office networks. Two
popular Ethernet configurations are 10Base-T (carrying 10
megabits per second) and 100Base-T (at 100Mbps). Ethernet
networks can be connected by coaxial, fiber optic and
twisted-pair cabling.
FastWireless
The
sexier name for IEEE 802.11 (see, we told you), a wireless
local area network (LAN) standard being promoted by WECA.
WECA, or the Wireless Ethernet Compatability Alliance, is a
consortium of networking companies who are trying to promote
FastWireless. Where wireless LANS in the past were slow (at
2 megabits/second), IEEE 802.11 is rated at speeds up to 11
megabits per second. WECA players include Lucent, 3COM and
Nokia.
File Allocation Table
[abbreviated
as "FAT"] You probably already know that the data
in your computer --the files and programs-- are not all
stored in one continuous block on a disk drive. Files are
stored as space allows in fixed groups of bytes. Think of
the file allocation table as the phone book that keeps track
of where everything is. The two most common FATs are FAT16
and FAT32 for MS-DOS/Windows. FAT16 (as in 16-bits) was
created back in the bad ol' days before hard drives and is
therefore not very efficient (and limits drives to 2.6GB in
size). FAT32 (32-bits), introduced with Win98, does a much
more efficient job of file allocation and does not have the
2.6GB size restriction. Your computer always keeps two
copies of the FAT in case one gets corrupted. If both become
corrupted, you're in deep do-do.
firmware
Software
that's stored in Read-Only Memory (ROM) and stays intact
even if the device has no power. Boot routines and other
low-level instructions are stored in firmware. Some firmware
can be upgraded, some can't.
flash ROM
[also
called "flash memory"] A type of nonvolatile (i.e.
it stays intact when power is off) memory commonly used as a
replacement for or supplement to a hard disk drive in a
portable computer (laptop, handheld, PDA, etc.)
FPU
[abbreviation
for "Floating-point Unit"] A computer circuit that
performs arithmetic functions called "floating point
operations." Floating point math is used whenever an
operation involves fractional numbers or irrational parts
used in spreadsheets and graphics rendering.
Frankenpants
Slang
used in Britain for a line of pants being sold that are made
out of GM (genetically-modified) cotton.
Friday night pizza maker
[Slang]
Japanese term for a salaryman who gets drunk on payday and
ends up leaving a puddle of vomit somewhere along his way
home.
GNOME
[abbreviation
for "GNU Network Object Model Environment"] The
GNOME project (pronounced with a hard "G") is a
collaborative software project building a complete
user-friendly graphic user interface (GUI) entirely with
free software components. GNOME is a GUI for GNU/Linux/Unix
systems. Find out more at the GNOME project page. GNU is the open source
OS project that Linux is partially built from. GNU stands
for the recursive "GNU is not Unix." The
"G" is hard so that the term is not confused with
"new."
gopod
[Slang]
The Supreme Being of cyberspace. Legend has it that gopod
started out as a typo (for god) on the Well BBS and the term
stuck. "I swear to gopod I'll open a topic to make fun
of you!"
GPS
[abbreviation
for "Global Positioning System"] GPS is a U.S.
Department of Defense network of 24 low-power radio
satellites that constantly broadcast their position and the
time. Ground-based GPS receivers use these satellite signals
to determine their location. Location accuracy for civilian
use is between 100 and 10 meters depending on equipment.
Accuracy of within one meter is possible with special
military-approved equipment and clearance.
GUIX
[Pronounced
"Gwicks"] Derogatory tech support slang for
Unix/Linux newbies who are used to GUIs (Graphical User
Interfaces) and don't know their way around a command line
interface. Hardcore Linux user are sometimes called
Penguinheads.
headless clients
Term
for the virtual clients used in "test load"
software on ecommerce sites to make sure the site can handle
high traffic numbers. Analysts say that many "e-tailers"
have not done adequate load testings for the projected
holiday onslaught.
HomePNA
[abbreviation
for "Home Phoneline Networking Alliance"] The
standard being developed by a consortium of computer
companies for home networking hardware and software that
uses your home's phone wiring to send data between multiple
PCs.
hoteling
Hoteling
ia a form of Internet service hosting where the customer
houses their own server box at their ISP's physical
location. Street Tech almost sent one of its Micron boxes to
our provider, Virtualscape, for hoteling Shop Talk, our
conferencing area (so it could have its own dedicated
server).
HotSync
[and
HotSyncing] The process of automatically synchronizing data
between a personal digital assistant (such as the PalmPilot)
and its corresponding program on a desktop computer. Changes
you make on the PDA or corresponding desktop program will be
reflected on both platforms after a HotSync. 3COM/US
Robotics holds the trademark to the term HotSync, but the
process of synchronizing between a PDA and a desktop
computer is common.
ICANN
[Acronym
for "Internet Corporation for Names and Numbers"] ICANN is the
non-governmental, non-profit organization set up earlier
this year ('99) to administrate the Internet's Domain Name
System (DNS). So far, things have not been going so well.
ICANN is currently dangerously low on cash, and so far, its
efforts have been widely criticized.
I-commerce
[Abbreviation
for "Individual Commerce"] A term coined by
Interactive Week to refer to the growing meta-affiliate
programs cropping up online. I-commerce sites aggregate
affiliate programs offered by such sites as Amazon, CDNOW,
Reel.Com and Magazine Mall. Some I-commerce sites are moving
into email affiliate programs where your email messages will
contain ads for products that you can get a commission on
(turning us all into junior spammers).
IEEE 1394
[a.k.a.
FireWire, i.LINK] A new standard for a high performance data
transfer bus developed by the IEEE (Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers). IEEE 1394 connects devices to
your computer via a single port on which up to 63 devices
can be attached with data transfer speeds of up to 400 Mbps
(megabits per second). The first products taking advantage
of this technology are digital camcorders and external hard
drives. Apple uses the trademarked name FireWire, Sony uses
i.Link. Everyone else uses oh-so-sexy IEEE 1394. Can't we
all just get along?
IPv6
[Abbreviation
for "Internet Protocol version 6"] The
long-awaited new version of the Internet Protocol (the Net's
addressing system). IPv6 lengthens IP addresses from 32 to
128 bits. This change will allow for tremendous expansion of
IP addresses -- for handheld, embedded and other next
generation Internet devices -- without fear of running out
of IP numbers. Also known as IPng (or "Internet
Protocol next generation"]. For more info, see Yahoo's IPv6 Page.
IRQ
[abbreviation
for "Interupt ReQuests"] IRQs are a means by which
the computer's data bus alerts the CPU to the fact that it
needs attention. The IRQ signals tell the CPU to temporarily
suspend normal operation and handle the interrupt request.
Devices that use hardware interrupts include modems,
printers, interface cards and other add-ons and peripherals.
The currently-common PCI bus allows
devices to share IRQs and USB does away
with them altogether.
ISA
[abbreviation
for "Industry Standard Architecture"] An older bus standard that is being replaced on newer
machines by PCI, although at least one
ISA slot is still found on even the newest motherboards to
handle legacy cards and peripherals. This will likely
changed by the end of 1999.
ISDN
(abbreviation
for "Integrated Services Digital Network") A
digital telephone standard that provides both voice and data
services over the same connection. ISDN can offer high-speed
access up to 64Kbps (1 channel) and 128Kbps (2 channel).
Joule
A
unit of measurement of the amount of energy delivered by one
watt of power in one second. A "Joule rating" is
the sum of a device's internal components' ability to absorb
and dissipate a surge of energy. In surge protectors, the
more important rating is the "let-through
voltage," or the amount of voltage that a surge
protector will actually pass to the equipment after being
blasted by a 6000v spike of electricity.
jumpers
On
a motherboard, jumpers are a set of pins that, by adding and
subtracting little plastic connectors over them, allow the
user to turn on or off certain operations.
Ku-Band
The
11.7 to 12.7 GHz (Gigahertz) frequency band used by Fixed
Satellite Services (FSS) and Broadcasting Satellite Services
(BSS).
logging off
[Slang]
Rathering disgusting techie slang for going to the bathroom.
Other terms for toiletry include the equally descriptive
"downloading" and the less offensive
"bio-break."
Linux
Linux
(pronounced "Lee-nooks") is a freely-distributed,
open operating system (OS) based on Unix, the multi-user,
multi-tasking OS created by Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie
at Bell Labs in the late '60s. Linux was written by Linus
Torvalds of Finland and has been built upon by many computer
scientists and hackers from around the world. Debian
(pronounced "Deb'-ian") Linux is one branch of
Linux's evolutionary tree.
LCD
(abbreviation
for "Liquid Crystal Display") [Warning: Gross
Oversimplification Ahead:] A display technology that uses a
liquid substance and an electrical field to polarize the
liquid into crystalline structures that form images on the
display. LCD displays are common on consumer electronic,
cell phone and laptop displays.
MCD
[Abbreviation
for "Multi-Communications Device"] Wireless
products that combine such things as a digital cell phone,
two-way radio, pager and Web access capabilities in a single
device.
Memory Effect
The
shortening of a battery's life by recharging it before it is
fully discharged. This is a big problem with *some* Nickel
Cadmium (NiCad) batteries, less so with Nickle Metal
Hydrides (NiMH) and not a problem (allegedly) with Lithium
Ion (Li-ion] batteries. Everything you want to know about
batteries but where afraid to ask can be found here.
microbrowser
The
small, bare-bones Web browsers that can be found in many
digital cellphones, PDAs and Internet appliances.
microcinema
A
term used to describe low-budget desktop-produced
"films," shot on digital video cameras, edited on
a desktop and distributed over the Net and via mailorder
videotape.
MIDI
[abbreviation
for "Musical Instrument Digital Interface"] A
standard developed to allow computers, synthesizers and
other electronic instruments to talk to each other via a
common interface. MIDI files contain information on what
instruments are to be played, for how long, the sustain,
etc. See also wavetable synthesis.
Moore's Law
In
1965, Intel co-founder Gordon Moore observed that
transistors per square inch on integrated circuits were
doubling every 12 months. This became known as Moore's Law.
That pace has shifted to 18 months, which is now used as the
measure of the Law. This pace is expected to stay relatively
constant for another decade or two.
Motion-JPEG
[abbreviated
"MJPEG"] MJPEG is a video standard created by the
Joint Photographic Experts Group, the organization that
created the common JPEG format for image compression. In
fact, MJPEG uses JPEG compression for each of the frames in
an MJPEG video. Hardware-based MJPEG allows you to capture
full resolution video at 30fps (frames per second) for high
quality video that is as close to the original source as
possible.
ML
[Abbreviation
for "Markup Language"] A generic way of referring
to all of the different types of markup languages: HTML, XML,
DHTML, VoxML, HDML, etc.
MP3
[abbreviation
for "MPEG Layer-3"] The audio extension for the
MPEG digital video standard. It has a surprisingly efficient
compression rate which makes it able to deliver near CD
quality audio over modem connections. MP3 is very
controversial because it has led to rampant piracy of
commercial audio over the Internet. The record companies say
that it is this piracy which has caused them to lobby so
hard against it. Supporters of the technology say that the
record industry is just trying to stall MP3 development
while they develop their own standard. The truth is probably
somewhere in-between. See also ripping.
MPEG-2
[abbreviation
for "Moving Pictures Experts Group"] The second
generation of the popular video compression standard, MPEG-2
presents images at resolutions of 720 x 480 and 1280 x 720
(pixels) at frame rates of 60 frames per second and offers
CD-quality audio. The quality of MPEG-2 is good enough for
NTSC television signals and even HDTV (high-definition
television). MPEG compression works by storing only the
parts of the images that change from one frame to the next,
instead of compressing the entire frame. Using MPEG-2, an
entire feature length film only takes up a few gigabytes of
storage space.
W32.MyPics.worm
Virus
sent as a picture email attachment. When downloaded, it
changes your default IE start page to a porn site and emails
the picture to 50 people in your Outlook address book. A
variant on the Melissa virus.
NAT
[Abbreviation
for "Network Address Translator"] Corporate
networks who want to have their own internal network
addresses (that may conflict with external Internet address)
use a NAT. The NAT intercepts outgoing communications and
converts conflicting IP addresses to something that the
Internet will be happy with.
OCR
[abbreviation
for "Optical Character Recognition"] OCR is the
means by which paper-based text is feed into a computer (via
a scanner), "read" by OCR software, and translated
into machine-readable text.
OEM
[Abbreviation
for "Original Equipment Manufacturer"] The
manufacturer of equipment that's sold by other vendors. OEM
products are usually sold under the brand name of the
re-seller. For example, the LCD flat-screen monitor at
Street Tech Labs has the Micron name on it, but it likely
was produced by an OEM and rebranded as a Micron product.
OS Persistence
OS
Persistence is basically an operating system that can boot
up in seconds to exactly where you left it, even if you
unplugged your computer in the meantime. OS Persistence work
by taking a snapshot of your RAM and writing it to a file on
your hard drive. When you turn your computer on again,
rather than loading everything thing up, it simply reads the
file off of your hard drive and writes the contents to your
RAM, and theoretically, within seconds, your computer is up
and running again exactly where it left off.
P3P
[abbreviation
for "Platform for Privacy Preferences Project"] A
privacy and personal information standard being developed by
the World Wide Web Consortium
(WC3). The basic idea is to create standards and practices
that will allow users to control how much personal
information they share with a website. P3P technology would,
for instance, alert a visitor to a site on the information
gathering practices of that site. For more information, see
the P3P FAQ.
portable portal (noun)
The
latest portal flavor of the month, "portable
portal" is the name given to Internet services like
AvantGo and Portal-to-Go that offer Web content and services
customized for non-PC users. [10/28/99]
personal proxy server
A
technology that allows users to enter their credit card and
other sensitive information only once, on a remote personal
profile form (on a secure server), and then use a browser
plug-in to automatically send relevant info from the
personal proxy server to websites as required.
PC-100 main memory bus
Introduced
in the middle of 1998, most motherboard manufacturers began
using a 100MHz main memory system bus in their designs,
replacing the older 66MHz bus. PC-100 buses are approx. 20%
faster than the older bus. To match the faster bus
speed,100MHz SDRAM ("Synchronous Dynamic Random Access
Memory") modules are required on all PCs with the
PC-100 bus. Both Apple and PC makers (circa early '99) are
using the PC-100 bus/100MHz SDRAM combo. See also bus and SDRAM.
PCMCIA card
(Also
called a "PC Card") A removable card that fits
into a PCMCIA slot on many digital devices (laptops,
Personal Digital Assistants, wireless communications
devices). PC cards house such things as additional memory,
modems and network interfaces. PCMCIA stands for
"Personal Computer Memory Card International
Association," the group who developed and trademarked
the technology.
PCI
(abbreviation
for "Peripheral Component Interface or
Interconnect") A 64-bit local bus that was introduced
to meet the more demanding needs of Pentium processors. The
maximum transfer rate on a PCI bus is 132 MB/sec. See also bus.
PCS
[abbreviation
for "Personal Communication Services"] The FCC's
term for digital cellular technologies. PCS standards
include GSM ("Global System for Mobile
Communications"), CDMA ("Code-Division Multiple
Access") and TDMA ("Time Division Multiple
Access"). PCS phones are completely digital and operate
in the 1900 MHz frequency range.
PDF
PDF
stands for "Portable Document Format," developed
by Adobe to allow documents to be read
"cross-platform," without the viewer needing the
program the document was created in. To read a document
saved in PDF format, you need the Adobe Acrobat Reader
(available at Adobe's
website).
PIP
[Abbreviation
for "Personal Internet Portal"] First there were
"portals," one-stop shops for news and
information, then there were "vortals," or
vertical portals that assembled everything related to a
particular market or subject. Now comes the "PIP,"
or personal portal. Developers see PIPs as the virtual
desktops of the future where your customized content,
unified messaging (phone, pager, email, fax, etc.), and
datafiles will be stored online.
POSIX
[Acronym
for "Portable Operating System Interface for
UNIX"] A set of standards that define the interface
between computer applications and POSIX-compliant operating
systems. POSIX-compliance UNIX systems allow developers to
more easily port programs to run on the many flavors of
UNIX, LINUX and even Windows NT.
POTS
(Abbreviation
for "Plain Old Telephone Service") The combination
of analog and digital, fiber optic and copper lined public
phone system we have today. Slowly being converted to
all-fiber/all-digital. The big stumbling block is the
so-called "last mile" to your house which, in most
locations, is still copper.
preparedness movement
Another
term for "survivalists," likely coined to move
beyond the kooky stigma of the previous term. Fears over Y2K
have allowed the "preparedness movement" to enjoy
mainstream attention.
prosumer
Consumer
electronics gear that is too high-priced (and feature-rich)
for average consumers, but not high-quality enough for most
professional applications. Sony's new line of Digital 8
cameras (in the thousand dollar range) would be considered
consumer fare, while the Canon near-broadcast-quality MiniDV
machines (in the two thousand dollar range) could be called
"prosumer."
RCA connector
Look
on the back of your VCR, stereo and other audio/video
equipment. Those connectors, often colored red
(audio-Right), black or white (audio-Left) and yellow
(video) are RCA connectors.
ripping
Ripping
(or "CD Ripping") is the process of digitally
extracting audio tracks from Compact Discs and converting
them to MP3 (or another audio format) for storage on a hard
disk or transfer over the Internet. Ripping is very
controversial because people convert commercial CDs to MP3
and then trade them over the Net. See also MP3.
RISC
[Abbreviation
for "Reduced Instruction Set Computer"] A
microprocessor chip that evolved from the earlier CISC
("Complex Instruction Set Computer") chip. The
RISC chip, developed at IBM in the early '70s, needed fewer
operating instructions (hence the name), was faster than
CISC processors (at least when executing simple
instructions), and was even cheaper to manufacture. The
Motorola PowerPC chip, used in PowerPC Macs (duh), is a RISC
chip. Other RISC chips include DEC's Alpha and Sun's SPARC.
RJ-11
The
most common type of telephone jack in the world is the
RJ-11. It is a 6-pin male modular jack (or plug) that
connects to a female jack on a wall (or an RJ-11 adapter).
RJ-11 jacks are usually only wired for four pins and only
two of them (usually the red and the green wires) are used
for the phone signal. The second pair can be used to carry a
second phone line or to run low-wattage electronics, such as
lights on phones. The second twisted pair of wires are
increasingly being used for phone-based home networks (to
connect your home PCs through your phone wiring).
"RJ" stands for Registered Jack. The numbers that
follow RJ (RJ-45, RJ-61X, etc.) are designations assigned by
the FCC.
RS-232
RS-232
is an industry standard for the interface that your computer
uses to talk to and exchange data with your modem and other
serial peripheral devices. Serial refers to the fact that
the data is transfered one bit at a time. In a parallel
connection (such as a parallel printer), data is sent in
groups of bits over multiple wires. The current version of
RS-232 is RS-232C.
RTFM
RTFM
is hacker shorthand for "Read The Freaking
Manual!" or...ah...words to that effect.
SCSI
(Abbreviation
for "Small Computer System Interface") A
high-speed parallel interface standard used to connect a
computer's CPU to a peripheral device such as a printer,
hard drive, or another computer.
SDMI
[Abbreviation
for "Secure Digital Music Initiative] The record
industry's attempt to stop MP3 piracy. When the scheme is
implemented (allegedly by Q4 '99), all new commercial CDs
will include a digital watermark. Playback on SDMI-compliant
MP3 players (and other Internet music devices) will only be
possible if the commercial releases contain the digital
watermark. Copies of songs that have been pirated will not
have the watermark and will therefore not work. For more
info see www.sdmi.org.
SDRAM
[Abbreviation
for "Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory"] A
superior form of DRAM that operates at higher clock speed
thanks to a "bursting" technology in the DRAM that
predicts the location of the memory address likely to be
accessed next.
shape memory alloy
[Abbreviated
as "SMA"] A type of metal alloy that retains its
shape when heated or cooled above an ambient temperature.
This process of heating/cooling, expanding/contracting
allows the wire to act like a biological muscle and to be
used in robotics and other machine applications where a
controllable force is required. A.k.a. "muscle
wire" or "shape memory metal."
sideloading
The
transfering of datafiles from one Internet site to another.
New virtual storage sites like i-drive let
you "sideload" MP3 files from MP3.com to your
personal remote directory (a.k.a. an "Internet
drive").
SIMM
[Abbreviation
for "Single Inline Memory Module"] A plug-in
circuit board that holds surface-mounted RAM memory chips.
The "single inline" part refers to the fact that
the pins on the module that plug into the SIMM socket on the
motherboard form a single row on the bottom of the circuit
board. A newer, higher bandwidth type of memory module
called a DIMM ("Dual Inline Memory Module") is
finding its way on to many systems.
skins
The
user-created graphical interfaces for MP3 players, games
like Quake and other types of software that allow the
creation of such custom interfaces.
smart dust
Airborne
nano-devices (individually called "motes")
containing sensors and communications capabilities.
Currently being developed at the University of Califoria,
Berkeley. For a fascinating near-future peak at how smart
dust might work, see Neal Stephenson's amazing book The
Diamond Age.
smart matter
Another
term for "micro-electromechanical systems" (MEMS),
a technology that imbeds micro-mechanical devices such as
sensors, gears and actuators into semiconductor chips. For
information on MEMS, see the MEMS Clearinghouse page.
SmartMedia Card
(less
commonly known as an SSFDC or "Solid State Floppy Disk
Card") A form of removable Flash RAM Memory card used
in digital cameras and other handheld computer devices.
SmartMedia cards come in both 3.3 and 5 volt versions with
storage copacity from 2MB to 16MB. SmartMedia is a
registered trademark. See PC Card and Compact Flash
Card.
sociomedia
Term
coined by MIT writing professor and hypermedia guru Ed
Barrett in the early '90s to refer to the type of socially
constructed media and knowledge that can grow from
computer-based interactions. Through online conferencing and
collaborative websites, useful news, information and
resources (along with chit-chat, fake news and flame wars)
are constructed over time. Street Tech's Shop Talk area
is a perfect example of sociomedia in action.
Socket 7
Name
for the socket on a PC motherboard that the original Intel
Pentium class processors plug into. For Pentium II and III,
Intel packaged its processor in a plastic cartridge that
fits into a slot (Slot 1 or Slot 2) on the motherboard. Many
thought Socket 7 was dead, but chip makers like AMD and
Cyrix, who continue to use the socket, have proven to be
worthy competitors.
SOHO
[Abbreviation
for "Small Office/Home Office"] As more people
telecommute and start home businesses, the SOHO has become a
desirable target market for office supply and computer
companies.
S/PDIF
[Abbreviation
for "Sony/Philips Digital InterFace"] A
consumer-grade digital stereo transmission format.
Soundcards equipped with S/PDIF co-axial jacks allow you to
turn your PC into a digital recording studio.
spread spectrum
Spread
spectrum radio is theoretically simple. Two radios
communicate by hopping from frequency to frequency,
transmitting and receiving packetized data. By spreading the
radio signal over a bunch of different frequencies in
sequence, it's almost impossible to intercept or jam.
spy key
A
backdoor into a computer operating system left their
intentionally by a manufacturer to give someone, such as a
government law enforcement agency, access. Accusations
against Microsoft imbedding such a key flew like fur in a
cat fight last week when a crypto website published
allegations to this effect.
SRAM
[Abbreviation
for "Static Random Access Memory"] A form of RAM
that retains its memory only as long as there is power to
run the device.
stealth tower
[slang]
A telecommunications antenna that's disguised as a natural
object (e.g. a tree) or hidden inside a tall structure such
as a church steeple or roof. Not to be confused with a stink
pipe antenna which is a pirate radio antenna hidden inside a
phony plumbing vent.
store-and-forward
A
communications system in which messages are received at an
intermediate routing point in a network, recorded (i.e.
stored), and then transmitted (i.e. forwarded) to another
routing point, or their final destination, at a later time.
This allows messages to be sent to machines that may be
offline or transferred over a net at off-peak hours when
rates and/or traffic are lower.
S-Video
[Abbreviation
for "Super Video"] A type of video technology that
delivers a much sharper image to TV monitors than composite
video (where the Red Green Blue, and often even the audio,
are mixed together. S-video handles color (chrominance) and
brightness (luminance) separately. Video cameras with
S-Video usually have both an S-Video output jack and the
more common RCA-type audio/video connections (used in
composite video). You can only take advantage of S-Video
playback if your TV has S-Video input.
T-1
(abbreviation
for "Digital Transmission Rate 1") A leased line
phone connection capable of carrying 1.544 megabits of data
per second. T-1 lines are commonly used to connect networks,
ISPs, Web providers and others to the Internet.
TDMA
[Abbreviation
for "Time Division Multiple Access"] TDMA is a
digital wireless service that uses something called
"time-division multiplexing" (TDM). TDM divides a
radio frequency into time slots and then allocates slots to
multiple mobile callers. With TDMA, a single radio frequency
can support multiple, simultaneous data transmissions. TDMA
is used by the GSM digital cellular standard, which is
popular in Europe and almost non-existant in the US.
Token Ring Network
A
local area network configuration that forms a closed ring of
machines where network traffic is managed through the
passing of digital tokens. A machine on the network cannot
send data unless it "has the floor" via the token.
A token ring can operate at up to 4 megabits (4 million
bits) per second.
truck roll
[Slang]
Phone and cable company slang for a technician's visit to a
customer's location. "We're looking at new ADSL
technologies that can limit our truck rolls."
trust providers
Financial
institutions, credit card companies and other
already-established bricks and mortar businesses that do
better with online financial transactions due to public
perception of their reliability and trustworthiness.
TWAIN
(abbreviation
for "Technology (or Toolkit) Without An Interesting
Name") TWAIN is an interface standard for scanner, fax,
graphics and text-reading (OCR) software. It allows images
to be scanned directly into the image editing software. All
good scanners come with software packages that include a
TWAIN driver.
UART
[Abbreviation
for "Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter"]
The UART is a computer chip that handles the traffic in and
out of your serial communication (comm) ports. The UART is a
common source of bottlenecks in a computer/modem
relationship. Newer computers use the 16550 UART chip which
has a 16-bit buffer. This has helped keep pace with today's
faster modems.
Ultra ATA
(a.k.a.
ATA-4, Ultra DMA, ATA-33, DMA-33) Ultra ATA is the latest
specification for the ATA/EIDE disk controller standard.
What do all these acronyms mean? EIDE, or "Enhance
Integrated Electronics Interface" is a technology that
puts all of the controller electronics for disk drives onto
the drives themselves. (The controllery goodness is backed
right in!) Ultra ATA allows for much faster data transfers
that are twice as fast as the previous ATA-2 (up to 33.3
megabits per second). More acronym fun: "ATA"
stands for "Advanced Technology Attachment" and is
synonymous with IDE. "DMA" stands for "Direct
Memory Access" and refers to the controller's ability
to talk directly between memory and the disk drive without
bothering the computer's CPU. See also EIDE.
UltraSCSI
[abbreviation
for "Ultra Small Computer System Interface"] A
SCSI interface is used to connect a computer to SCSII
peripherals (hard drives, removable drives, printers, etc.).
UltraSCSI is an updated version of SCSII-2 which can
transfer data at 20MBs on an 8-bit connection and 40MBs on a
16-bit connection.
USB
(abbreviation
for "Universal Serial Bus") The latest generation
of serial bus technology that can transfer data at up to 12
Megabits/second, can be daisy chained (with up to 127
devices on a single port) and can provide power from the
computer's power supply to peripherals (so that peripherals
do not need their own AC power). USB "hubs," boxes
that provide multiple USB ports and a power boost to the USB
chain are usually needed if you have more than a few USB
devices on your machine. USB also allows hot-plugging so
that you can plug and unplug peripheral devices without
having to shut down your computer.
UUCP
[Abbreviation
for "Unix-to-Unix Copy"] A suite of software
programs that allow information to be passed between Unix
machines using serial connections. UUCP was invented at Bell
Labs in the late '70s to allow for the transfer of programs,
datafiles and email between Unix machines over standard
telephone lines. The Usenet newsgroups grew out of UUCP.
V.90
The
finally agreed-upon standard for 56Kbps analog modems.
Earlier competing standards, Rockwell's K56Flex and 3COM's
X2, are still widespread as consumers and service providers
upgrade to the new standard. Most 56K modems sold before the
standard approval can be software upgraded to V.90. The V.90
is likely to be the last analog modem standard, with cable
modems, DSL and other high-bandwidth connectivity schemes
from here on out.
vi Editor
A
powerful line-mode text editor commonly used in Unix (and
Linux) systems. vi is noted for its powerful and numerous
keyboard commands. vi is used in programming and for writing
and editing files and documents. There is some debate over
what "vi" stands for. Some claim it means
"visual interface," while others say it simply
comes from the first two letters in "visual."
VoADSL
[abbreviation
for "Voice over Asymmetric Digital Subscriber
Line"] What network equipment vendors such as Cisco,
Lucent and Nortel are touting as the next tech wave after
DSL delivers high-speed data access over existing copper
lines. VoDSL is simply the delivery of voice communications
via the same DSL pipe that carries Internet traffic.
VoiceXML
[Abbreviation
for "Voice Extensible Markup Language"] A new type
of Web specification being developed by a consortium of
media and technology companies, VoiceXML would allow for
voice access of Web content over a telephone.
WAP
[Abbreviation
for "Wireless Access Protocol"] WAP is a
specification for wireless communication protocols. The idea
is to standardize the technology by which cellphones, radio
devices, wireless modems, and other similar devices access
the Internet so that these devices can interoperate. Gee,
what a concept! For more info, ckeck out the WAP Forum.
wavetable synthesis
Wavetable
synthesis is a sound technology that uses samples of real
instruments to create more realistic music playback. If a MIDI file calls for say a trombone to play
a C note, the computer (or MIDI instrument) accesses the
wavetable and chooses the appropriate note, pitch, etc. It's
hard to imagine that this works and can sound good, but it
does (with varying results depending on the quality of the
wavetable, the hardware, etc.) Wavetable synthesis is, in
most cases, much better than FM synthesis, its predecessor.
Web clipping service
A
limited Web service provided for wireless devices where
service partners provide content tailored to wireless market
and microbrowsers. 3COM's new Palm VII employs such a
clipping service. Although 3COM already has an impressive
list of partners, a Web clipping service is only as good as
its content, and so far, that content is limited.
Week 1K Problem
A
bug in the GPS (Global Position System) that could cause
problems starting on Aug. 22, 1999 and could hint at what's
to come with Y2K. GPS sats communicate time via a 29-bit
binary number. Ten of those bits communicate the week
number. On the August date (the thousandth week), the number
will get too large for the 10-bit sequence. Afflicted GPS
sats will reset to zero. The military says it's ready, but
civilian GPS receivers (esp. older ones), may not be.
whack a mole
[slang]
In the wild and wooly world of e-porn, the process of trying
to close all of the pop-up windows that abnoxiously appear
every time you attempt to close previous browser windows.
Name comes from the popular carnival game.
Word turd
[Slang]
1. The words in a word-processed document that are left over
from a previous construction of a sentence (.e.g. [from the
Creatures manual] ...the balance of which changes affects
Norn behavior.). 2. All the bits and pieces of software that
Microsoft Office, and other similarly bloated programs,
spray all over your PC during a typical install.
XGA
[Abbreviation
for "Extended Graphics Array"] A high-res computer
display standard developed by IBM in 1990. XGA supports
65,536 colors at a screen resolution of 640 x 480 pixels and
256 colors at 1,024 x 768 pixels. The latest XGA-2 offers
1,024 by 768 resolution in high color and a higher-refresh
rate than XGA.
XJACK
A
type of phone jack built into laptop PC-card modems.
PC-cards are too thin to accept a conventional RJ-11 phone
plug. An XJACK is a horizontal jack that pops out from the
modem card, letting you vertically insert the RJ-11 plug.
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