slovo | definícia |
100 (gcide) | 100 \100\ adj.
1. the Arabic numerals representing the number one hundred;
denoting a quantity consisting of one more than ninety
nine and one less than one hundred and one; ten times ten
Syn: hundred, a hundred, one hundred, c
[WordNet 1.5 +PJC] |
100 (wn) | 100
adj 1: being ten more than ninety [syn: hundred, {one
hundred}, 100, c]
n 1: ten 10s [syn: hundred, 100, C, century, one C] |
| podobné slovo | definícia |
100-year flood (encz) | 100-year flood,stoletá povodeň n: [eko.] Ivan Masár100-year flood,stoletá voda n: [eko.] Ivan Masár |
absolute lethal dose (ld100) (encz) | absolute lethal dose (LD100),absolutní (smrtelná) letální dávka
(LD100) [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
lc 100 concentration (encz) | LC 100 concentration,LC 100 koncentrace [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
100 pencí (czen) | 100 pencí,quidadj: Zdeněk Brož |
absolutní (smrtelná) letální dávka (ld100) (czen) | absolutní (smrtelná) letální dávka (LD100),absolute lethal dose
(LD100)[eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
lc 100 koncentrace (czen) | LC 100 koncentrace,LC 100 concentration[eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač |
letální dávka pesticidu (ld100) (czen) | letální dávka pesticidu (LD100),lethal pesticide dose[eko.] RNDr. Pavel
Piskač |
1000 (gcide) | 1000 \1000\ adj.
1. denoting a quantity consisting of one more than nine
hundred ninety nine and one less than one thousand and
one; -- representing the number one thousand as Arabic
numerals
Syn: thousand, a thousand, one thousand, m, k
[WordNet 1.5 +PJC] |
1000th (gcide) | 1000th \1000th\ adj.
1. coming next after the nine hundred ninety-ninth in a
series
Syn: thousandth
[WordNet 1.5] |
100th (gcide) | 100th \100th\ adj.
1. coming next after the ninety-ninth in a series
Syn: hundredth, centesimal
[WordNet 1.5 +PJC] |
1000 (wn) | 1000
adj 1: denoting a quantity consisting of 1,000 items or units
[syn: thousand, one thousand, 1000, m, k]
n 1: the cardinal number that is the product of 10 and 100 [syn:
thousand, one thousand, 1000, M, K, chiliad,
G, grand, thou, yard] |
10000 (wn) | 10000
n 1: the cardinal number that is the product of ten and one
thousand [syn: ten thousand, 10000, myriad] |
100000 (wn) | 100000
n 1: the cardinal number that is the fifth power of ten [syn:
hundred thousand, 100000, lakh] |
1000000 (wn) | 1000000
n 1: the number that is represented as a one followed by 6 zeros
[syn: million, 1000000, one thousand thousand, meg] |
1000000000 (wn) | 1000000000
n 1: the number that is represented as a one followed by 9 zeros
[syn: billion, one thousand million, 1000000000] |
1000000000000 (wn) | 1000000000000
n 1: the number that is represented as a one followed by 12
zeros; "in England they call a trillion a billion" [syn:
trillion, one million million, 1000000000000]
2: the number that is represented as a one followed by 12 zeros;
in the United Kingdom the usage followed in the United States
is frequently seen [syn: billion, one million million,
1000000000000] |
1000th (wn) | 1000th
adj 1: the ordinal number of one thousand in counting order
[syn: thousandth, 1000th] |
100th (wn) | 100th
adj 1: the ordinal number of one hundred in counting order [syn:
hundredth, centesimal, 100th] |
atomic number 100 (wn) | atomic number 100
n 1: a radioactive transuranic metallic element produced by
bombarding plutonium with neutrons [syn: fermium, Fm,
atomic number 100] |
100basefx (foldoc) | 100BaseFX
Fast Ethernet over optical fibre.
(1998-03-23)
|
100baset (foldoc) | 100BaseT
Any of several Fast Ethernet 100 MBps
CSMA/CD standards for twisted pair cables, including:
100BaseTx (100 Mbps over two-pair Cat5 or better cable),
100BaseT4 (100 Mbps over four-pair Cat3 or better cable),
100BaseT2 (in committee; 100 Mbps over two-pair Cat3 or better
cable). All are standards (or planned standards) under IEEE
802.3.
(1997-01-07)
|
100basetx (foldoc) | 100BaseTX
The predominant form of Fast Ethernet.
100BaseTX runs over two pairs of wires in category 5 cable.
(1998-06-30)
|
100basevg (foldoc) | 100BaseVG
100VG-AnyLAN
A 100 MBps Ethernet standard specified to run
over four pairs of category 3 UTP wires (known as voice
grade, hence the "VG"). It is also called 100VG-AnyLAN
because it was defined to carry both Ethernet and {token
ring} frame types.
100BaseVG was originally proposed by Hewlett-Packard,
ratified by the ISO in 1995 and practically extinct by 1998.
100BaseVG started in the IEEE 802.3u committee as {Fast
Ethernet}. One faction wanted to keep CSMA/CD in order to
keep it pure Ethernet, even though the collision domain
problem limited the distances to one tenth that of 10baseT.
Another faction wanted to change to a polling architecture
from the hub (they called it "demand priority") in order to
maintain the 10baseT distances, and also to make it a
deterministic protocol. The CSMA/CD crowd said, "This is
802.3 -- the Ethernet committee. If you guys want to make a
different protocol, form your own committee". The IEEE 802.12
committee was thus formed and standardised 100BaseVG. The
rest is history.
(1998-06-30)
|
100vg-anylan (foldoc) | 100BaseVG
100VG-AnyLAN
A 100 MBps Ethernet standard specified to run
over four pairs of category 3 UTP wires (known as voice
grade, hence the "VG"). It is also called 100VG-AnyLAN
because it was defined to carry both Ethernet and {token
ring} frame types.
100BaseVG was originally proposed by Hewlett-Packard,
ratified by the ISO in 1995 and practically extinct by 1998.
100BaseVG started in the IEEE 802.3u committee as {Fast
Ethernet}. One faction wanted to keep CSMA/CD in order to
keep it pure Ethernet, even though the collision domain
problem limited the distances to one tenth that of 10baseT.
Another faction wanted to change to a polling architecture
from the hub (they called it "demand priority") in order to
maintain the 10baseT distances, and also to make it a
deterministic protocol. The CSMA/CD crowd said, "This is
802.3 -- the Ethernet committee. If you guys want to make a
different protocol, form your own committee". The IEEE 802.12
committee was thus formed and standardised 100BaseVG. The
rest is history.
(1998-06-30)
|
d-1000 (foldoc) | D-1000
Datamatic Corporation's first computer,
which weighed 25 tons, took up 6,000 square feet and
cost $1.5 million, produced some time after 1955.
(2009-01-14)
|
f100-l (foldoc) | Ferranti F100-L
F100-L
A processor, with 16-bit addressing, registers
and data paths and a 1-bit serial ALU. The F100-L could
only access 32K of memory (one address bit was used for
indirection). It was designed by a British company for the
British Military.
The unique feature of the F100-L was that it had a complete
control bus available for a coprocessor. Any instruction
the F100-L couldn't decode was sent directly to the
coprocessor for processing. Applications for coprocessors at
the time were limited, but the design is still used in modern
processors, such as the National Semiconductor 32000 series.
The disk operating system was written by Alec Cawley.
(2007-05-19)
|
ferranti f100-l (foldoc) | Ferranti F100-L
F100-L
A processor, with 16-bit addressing, registers
and data paths and a 1-bit serial ALU. The F100-L could
only access 32K of memory (one address bit was used for
indirection). It was designed by a British company for the
British Military.
The unique feature of the F100-L was that it had a complete
control bus available for a coprocessor. Any instruction
the F100-L couldn't decode was sent directly to the
coprocessor for processing. Applications for coprocessors at
the time were limited, but the design is still used in modern
processors, such as the National Semiconductor 32000 series.
The disk operating system was written by Alec Cawley.
(2007-05-19)
|
ims 6100 (foldoc) | Intersil 6100
IMS 6100
(IMS 6100) A single chip design of the DEC
PDP-8 minicomputer. The old PDP-8 design was very
strange, and if it hadn't been popular, an awkward CPU like
the 6100 would never been designed.
The 6100 was a 12-bit processor, which had three registers:
the PC, AC (accumulator), and MQ. All 2-operand
instructions read AC and MQ and wrote back to AC. It had a
12-bit address bus, limiting RAM to only 4K. Memory
references were 7-bit, offset either from address 0, or from
the PC page base address (PC AND 7600 oct).
It had no stack. Subroutines stored the PC in the first
word of the subroutine code itself, so recursion required
fancy programming.
4K RAM was pretty much hopeless for general purpose use. The
6102 support chip (included in the 6120) added 3 address
lines, expanding memory to 32K the same way that the PDP-8/E
expanded the PDP-8. Two registers, IFR and DFR, held the page
for instructions and data respectively (IFR was always used
until a data address was detected). At the top of the 4K
page, the PC wrapped back to 0, so the last instruction on a
page had to load a new value into the IFR if execution was to
continue.
(2003-04-04)
|
intersil 6100 (foldoc) | Intersil 6100
IMS 6100
(IMS 6100) A single chip design of the DEC
PDP-8 minicomputer. The old PDP-8 design was very
strange, and if it hadn't been popular, an awkward CPU like
the 6100 would never been designed.
The 6100 was a 12-bit processor, which had three registers:
the PC, AC (accumulator), and MQ. All 2-operand
instructions read AC and MQ and wrote back to AC. It had a
12-bit address bus, limiting RAM to only 4K. Memory
references were 7-bit, offset either from address 0, or from
the PC page base address (PC AND 7600 oct).
It had no stack. Subroutines stored the PC in the first
word of the subroutine code itself, so recursion required
fancy programming.
4K RAM was pretty much hopeless for general purpose use. The
6102 support chip (included in the 6120) added 3 address
lines, expanding memory to 32K the same way that the PDP-8/E
expanded the PDP-8. Two registers, IFR and DFR, held the page
for instructions and data respectively (IFR was always used
until a data address was detected). At the top of the 4K
page, the PC wrapped back to 0, so the last instruction on a
page had to load a new value into the IFR if execution was to
continue.
(2003-04-04)
|
vt100 (foldoc) | vt100
DEC's definitive CRT video terminal of the
early/mid 1980s. Its control codes and escape sequences
still form the basis of the xterm set and of the ANSI or
IBM PC standards. VT100 compatibility is still provided by
most terminal emulators.
[On-line documentation?]
(1995-03-28)
|
vt100 (vera) | VT100
Virtual Terminal 100 (DEC), "VT-100"
|
|