slovodefinícia
client
(mass)
client
- klient
client
(encz)
client,klient [eko.] Organizace, která audit objednává RNDr. Pavel
Piskač
client
(encz)
client,zákazník n: Zdeněk Brož
Client
(gcide)
Client \Cli"ent\, n. [L. cliens, -emtis, for cluens, one who
hears (in relation to his protector), a client, fr. L. cluere
to be named or called; akin to Gr. ? to hear, Skr. [,c]ry,
and E. loud: cf. F. client. See Loud.]
1. (Rom. Antiq.) A citizen who put himself under the
protection of a man of distinction and influence, who was
called his patron.
[1913 Webster]

2. A dependent; one under the protection of another.
[1913 Webster]

I do think they are your friends and clients,
And fearful to disturb you. --B. Jonson.
[1913 Webster]

3. (Law) One who consults a legal adviser, or submits his
cause to his management.
[1913 Webster]
client
(wn)
client
n 1: a person who seeks the advice of a lawyer
2: someone who pays for goods or services [syn: customer,
client]
3: (computer science) any computer that is hooked up to a
computer network [syn: node, client, guest]
client
(foldoc)
client

A computer system or process that requests a
service of another computer system or process (a "server")
using some kind of protocol and accepts the server's
responses. A client is part of a client-server software
architecture.

For example, a workstation requesting the contents of a file
from a file server is a client of the file server.

(1997-10-27)
CLIENT
(bouvier)
CLIENT, practice. One who employs and retains an attorney or counsellor to
manage or defend a suit or action in which he is a party, or to advise him
about some legal matters.
2. The duties of the client towards his counsel are, 1st. to give him a
written authority, 1 Ch. Pr. 19; 2. to disclose his case with perfect
candor3. to offer spontaneously, advances of money to his attorney; 2 Ch.
Pr. 27; 4. he should, at the end of the suit, promptly pay his attorney his
fees. Ib. His rights are, 1. to be diligently served in the management of
his business 2. to be informed of its progress and, 3. that his counsel
shall not disclose what has been professionally confided to him. See
Attorney at law; Confidential communication.

podobné slovodefinícia
clientcentered
(mass)
client-centered
- zamerané na klienta
clientele
(mass)
clientele
- klientela
audit client
(encz)
audit client,klient auditu [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač
client-centered therapy
(encz)
client-centered therapy, n:
clientage
(encz)
clientage,klientela Zdeněk Brožclientage,zákazníci n: pl. Zdeněk Brož
clientele
(encz)
clientele,klientela n: Zdeněk Brož
clientelism
(encz)
clientelism,klientelismus n: xkomczax
clients
(encz)
clients,klienti n: Zdeněk Brož
lawyer-client relation
(encz)
lawyer-client relation, n:
Client
(gcide)
Client \Cli"ent\, n. [L. cliens, -emtis, for cluens, one who
hears (in relation to his protector), a client, fr. L. cluere
to be named or called; akin to Gr. ? to hear, Skr. [,c]ry,
and E. loud: cf. F. client. See Loud.]
1. (Rom. Antiq.) A citizen who put himself under the
protection of a man of distinction and influence, who was
called his patron.
[1913 Webster]

2. A dependent; one under the protection of another.
[1913 Webster]

I do think they are your friends and clients,
And fearful to disturb you. --B. Jonson.
[1913 Webster]

3. (Law) One who consults a legal adviser, or submits his
cause to his management.
[1913 Webster]
Clientage
(gcide)
Clientage \Cli"ent*age\, n.
1. State of being client.
[1913 Webster]

2. A body of clients. --E. Everett.
[1913 Webster]
Cliental
(gcide)
Cliental \Cli*en"tal\, a.
Of or pertaining to a client.
[1913 Webster]

A dependent and cliental relation. --Burke.
[1913 Webster]

I sat down in the cliental chair. --Dickens.
[1913 Webster]
Cliented
(gcide)
Cliented \Cli"ent*ed\, a.
Supplied with clients. [R.]
[1913 Webster]

The least cliented pettifiggers. --R. Carew.
[1913 Webster]
Clientelage
(gcide)
Clientelage \Cli*en"te*lage\, n.
See Clientele, n., 2.
[1913 Webster]
Clientele
(gcide)
Clientele \Cli`en*tele"\ (? or ?), n. [L. clientela: cf. F.
client[`e]le.]
1. The condition or position of a client; clientship. [Obs.]
--Bp. Hall.
[1913 Webster]

2. The clients or dependents of a nobleman of patron.
[1913 Webster]

3. The persons who make habitual use of the services of
another person; one's clients, collectively; as, the
clientele of a lawyer, doctor, notary, etc.
[1913 Webster]
Clientship
(gcide)
Clientship \Cli"ent*ship\, n.
Condition of a client; state of being under the protection of
a patron. --Dryden.
[1913 Webster]
attorney-client privilege
(wn)
attorney-client privilege
n 1: the right of a lawyer to refuse to divulge confidential
information from his client
attorney-client relation
(wn)
attorney-client relation
n 1: the responsibility of a lawyer to act in the best interests
of the client [syn: lawyer-client relation, {attorney-
client relation}]
client-centered therapy
(wn)
client-centered therapy
n 1: a method of psychotherapy developed by Carl Rogers in which
the client determines the focus and pace of each session
client-server
(wn)
client-server
adj 1: relating to a computer system in which a central server
supports a number of networked workstations
clientage
(wn)
clientage
n 1: relation of a client to a patron
clientele
(wn)
clientele
n 1: customers collectively; "they have an upper class
clientele" [syn: clientele, patronage, business]
lawyer-client relation
(wn)
lawyer-client relation
n 1: the responsibility of a lawyer to act in the best interests
of the client [syn: lawyer-client relation, {attorney-
client relation}]
client to client protocol
(foldoc)
Client To Client Protocol

(CTCP) A type of protocol created to allow
structured data such as font information to be exchanged
between users on IRC. It is also used to send a query to a
user. The available CTCP commands include VERSION, FINGER,
DCC CHAT, DCC SEND, TIME, PING, ECHO, CLIENTINFO. Some
commands are not available on some IRC client software.

(1995-04-12)
client-server
(foldoc)
client-server
client/server
client-server model

A common form of distributed system in which
software is split between server tasks and client tasks.
A client sends requests to a server, according to some
protocol, asking for information or action, and the server
responds.

This is analogous to a customer (client) who sends an order
(request) on an order form to a supplier (server) who
despatches the goods and an invoice (response). The order
form and invoice are part of the "protocol" used to
communicate in this case.

There may be either one centralised server or several
distributed ones. This model allows clients and servers to be
placed independently on nodes in a network, possibly on
different hardware and operating systems appropriate to
their function, e.g. fast server/cheap client.

Examples are the name-server/name-resolver relationship in
DNS, the file-server/file-client relationship in NFS and
the screen server/client application split in the {X Window
System}.

Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.client-server.

["The Essential Client/Server Survival Guide", 2nd edition,
1996].

(1998-01-25)
client-server analyst programmer
(foldoc)
Client-Server Analyst Programmer

A person who analyses and designs application programs
for a client-server architecture. Typical skills include
ODBC, Windows 95, Windows NT, Macintosh, Novell,
OS/2, Unix, and RPC.

(2004-03-09)
client-server model
(foldoc)
client-server
client/server
client-server model

A common form of distributed system in which
software is split between server tasks and client tasks.
A client sends requests to a server, according to some
protocol, asking for information or action, and the server
responds.

This is analogous to a customer (client) who sends an order
(request) on an order form to a supplier (server) who
despatches the goods and an invoice (response). The order
form and invoice are part of the "protocol" used to
communicate in this case.

There may be either one centralised server or several
distributed ones. This model allows clients and servers to be
placed independently on nodes in a network, possibly on
different hardware and operating systems appropriate to
their function, e.g. fast server/cheap client.

Examples are the name-server/name-resolver relationship in
DNS, the file-server/file-client relationship in NFS and
the screen server/client application split in the {X Window
System}.

Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.client-server.

["The Essential Client/Server Survival Guide", 2nd edition,
1996].

(1998-01-25)
client/server
(foldoc)
client-server
client/server
client-server model

A common form of distributed system in which
software is split between server tasks and client tasks.
A client sends requests to a server, according to some
protocol, asking for information or action, and the server
responds.

This is analogous to a customer (client) who sends an order
(request) on an order form to a supplier (server) who
despatches the goods and an invoice (response). The order
form and invoice are part of the "protocol" used to
communicate in this case.

There may be either one centralised server or several
distributed ones. This model allows clients and servers to be
placed independently on nodes in a network, possibly on
different hardware and operating systems appropriate to
their function, e.g. fast server/cheap client.

Examples are the name-server/name-resolver relationship in
DNS, the file-server/file-client relationship in NFS and
the screen server/client application split in the {X Window
System}.

Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.client-server.

["The Essential Client/Server Survival Guide", 2nd edition,
1996].

(1998-01-25)
direct client to client protocol
(foldoc)
Direct Client to Client Protocol

(DCC) An IRC protocol created to allow users
to chat privately and to send and receive files directly
instead of having to go thorugh the IRC servers. DCC protects
users from being monitored by IRC Server operators that have
enabled conversation logging. It also allows much more
efficient use of available bandwidth as the data does not
need to be broadcast all over the world just to reach a
specific user.

The available DCC commands include DCC CHAT (direct user to
user chat), DCC SEND (direct user to user file send) and DCC
GET (file acknowledgement from a receiver).

(1995-04-12)
e-mail client
(foldoc)
e-mail client

Mail User Agent
electronic mail client
(foldoc)
electronic mail client

Mail User Agent
fat client
(foldoc)
fat client

Opposite of "thin client".

(1996-12-08)
gopher client
(foldoc)
Gopher client

A program which runs on your local computer and
provides a user interface to the Gopher protocol and to
gopher servers. Web browsers can act as Gopher clients and
simple Gopher-only clients are available for ordinary
terminals, the X Window System, GNU Emacs, and other
systems.

(ftp://boombox.micro.umn.edu/).

(2001-03-31)
light client
(foldoc)
thin client
light client

A simple client program or hardware device
which relies on most of the function of the system being in
the server.

Gopher clients, for example, are very thin; they are
stateless and are not required to know how to interpret and
display objects much more complex than menus and plain text.
Gopher servers, on the other hand, can search databases and
provide gateways to other services.

By the mid-1990s, the model of decentralised computing where
each user has his own full-featured and independent
microcomputer, seemed to have displaced a centralised model
in which multiple users use thin clients (e.g. {dumb
terminals}) to work on a shared minicomputer or mainframe
server. Networked personal computers typically operate as
"fat clients", often providing everything except some file
storage and printing locally.

By 1996, reintroduction of thin clients is being proposed,
especially for LAN-type environments (see the {cycle of
reincarnation}). The main expected benefit of this is ease of
maintenance: with fat clients, especially those suffering from
the poor networking support of Microsoft {operating
systems}, installing a new application for everyone is likely
to mean having to physically go to every user's workstation to
install the application, or having to modify client-side
configuration options; whereas with thin clients the
maintenance tasks are centralised on the server and so need
only be done once.

Also, by virtue of their simplicity, thin clients generally
have fewer hardware demands, and are less open to being
screwed up by ambitious lusers.

Never one to miss a bandwagon, Microsoft bought up {Insignia
Solutions, Inc.}'s "NTRIGUE" Windows remote-access product
and combined it with Windows NT version 4 to allow thin
clients (either hardware or software) to communicate with
applications running under on a server machine under {Windows
Terminal Server} in the same way as X had done for Unix
decades before.

(1999-02-01)
smbclient
(foldoc)
Samba
smbclient
smblib

A free suite of programs which implement the
Server Message Block (SMB) protocol.

Originally developed for Unix by Andrew Tridgell at the
Australian National University, the Samba server allows
files and printers on the host operating system to be
shared with clients such as Windows for Workgroups, DOS,
OS/2, Windows NT and others.

For example, instead of using telnet to log in to a Unix
machine to edit a file there, a Windows 95 user might
connect a drive in the Windows Explorer to a Samba server on
the Unix machine and edit the file in a Windows editor.

A Unix client called smbclient, built from the same {source
code}, allows ftp-like access to SMB resources.

Samba is available for many Unix variants, OS/2, and VMS.
Porting to Novell Netware is in progress (August 1996).

smblib is a portable generic library for making SMB calls
for implementing client/server functions from within any
program. Linux implements a complete file system (based on
smbclient) so by default Linux users have full access to
resources on LAN Server, Windows NT and LAN Manager
networks.

(http://samba.org/samba/samba.html).

(1998-11-22)
thin client
(foldoc)
thin client
light client

A simple client program or hardware device
which relies on most of the function of the system being in
the server.

Gopher clients, for example, are very thin; they are
stateless and are not required to know how to interpret and
display objects much more complex than menus and plain text.
Gopher servers, on the other hand, can search databases and
provide gateways to other services.

By the mid-1990s, the model of decentralised computing where
each user has his own full-featured and independent
microcomputer, seemed to have displaced a centralised model
in which multiple users use thin clients (e.g. {dumb
terminals}) to work on a shared minicomputer or mainframe
server. Networked personal computers typically operate as
"fat clients", often providing everything except some file
storage and printing locally.

By 1996, reintroduction of thin clients is being proposed,
especially for LAN-type environments (see the {cycle of
reincarnation}). The main expected benefit of this is ease of
maintenance: with fat clients, especially those suffering from
the poor networking support of Microsoft {operating
systems}, installing a new application for everyone is likely
to mean having to physically go to every user's workstation to
install the application, or having to modify client-side
configuration options; whereas with thin clients the
maintenance tasks are centralised on the server and so need
only be done once.

Also, by virtue of their simplicity, thin clients generally
have fewer hardware demands, and are less open to being
screwed up by ambitious lusers.

Never one to miss a bandwagon, Microsoft bought up {Insignia
Solutions, Inc.}'s "NTRIGUE" Windows remote-access product
and combined it with Windows NT version 4 to allow thin
clients (either hardware or software) to communicate with
applications running under on a server machine under {Windows
Terminal Server} in the same way as X had done for Unix
decades before.

(1999-02-01)
x client
(foldoc)
X client

An application process in the X Window System. It gains
access to windowing services via the Xlib library. These are
translated by the system into X protocol messages to an {X
server}.
CLIENT
(bouvier)
CLIENT, practice. One who employs and retains an attorney or counsellor to
manage or defend a suit or action in which he is a party, or to advise him
about some legal matters.
2. The duties of the client towards his counsel are, 1st. to give him a
written authority, 1 Ch. Pr. 19; 2. to disclose his case with perfect
candor3. to offer spontaneously, advances of money to his attorney; 2 Ch.
Pr. 27; 4. he should, at the end of the suit, promptly pay his attorney his
fees. Ib. His rights are, 1. to be diligently served in the management of
his business 2. to be informed of its progress and, 3. that his counsel
shall not disclose what has been professionally confided to him. See
Attorney at law; Confidential communication.

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