slovo | definícia |
intelligent (mass) | intelligent
- inteligentný |
intelligent (encz) | intelligent,inteligentní adj: |
intelligent (encz) | intelligent,rozumný luke |
intelligent (encz) | intelligent,vzdělaný luke |
Intelligent (gcide) | Intelligent \In*tel"li*gent\, a. [L. intelligens, intellegens,
-entis, p. pr. of intelligere, intellegere, to perceive;
inter between + legere to gather, collect, choose: cf. F.
intelligent. See Legend.]
[1913 Webster]
1. Endowed with the faculty of understanding or reason; as,
man is an intelligent being.
[1913 Webster]
2. Possessed of a high level of intelligence, education, or
judgment; knowing; sensible; skilled; exhibiting high
intelligence; as, an intelligent young man; an intelligent
architect; an intelligent answer.
[1913 Webster]
3. Cognizant; aware; communicative. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]
Intelligent of seasons. --Milton.
[1913 Webster]
Which are to France the spies and speculations
Intelligent of our state. --Shak.
Syn: Sensible; understanding. See Sensible.
[1913 Webster] |
intelligent (wn) | intelligent
adj 1: having the capacity for thought and reason especially to
a high degree; "is there intelligent life in the
universe?"; "an intelligent question" [ant: stupid,
unintelligent]
2: possessing sound knowledge; "well-informed readers" [syn:
intelligent, well-informed]
3: exercising or showing good judgment; "healthy scepticism"; "a
healthy fear of rattlesnakes"; "the healthy attitude of
French laws"; "healthy relations between labor and
management"; "an intelligent solution"; "a sound approach to
the problem"; "sound advice"; "no sound explanation for his
decision" [syn: healthy, intelligent, levelheaded,
level-headed, sound]
4: endowed with the capacity to reason [syn: intelligent,
reasoning(a), thinking(a)] |
| podobné slovo | definícia |
intelligent (mass) | intelligent
- inteligentný |
intelligentsia (mass) | intelligentsia
- inteligencia |
intelligent (encz) | intelligent,inteligentní adj: intelligent,rozumný lukeintelligent,vzdělaný luke |
intelligently (encz) | intelligently,inteligentně luke |
intelligentsia (encz) | intelligentsia,inteligence n: Zdeněk Brož |
unintelligent (encz) | unintelligent,neinteligentní adj: Zdeněk Brož |
unintelligently (encz) | unintelligently, adv: |
Intelligential (gcide) | Intelligential \In*tel`li*gen"tial\, a. [Cf. F. intelligentiel.]
[R.]
[1913 Webster]
1. Of or pertaining to the intelligence; exercising or
implying understanding; intellectual. "With act
intelligential." --Milton.
[1913 Webster]
2. Consisting of unembodied mind; incorporeal.
[1913 Webster]
Food alike those pure
Intelligential substances require. --Milton.
[1913 Webster] |
Intelligentiary (gcide) | Intelligentiary \In*tel`li*gen"tia*ry\, n.
One who gives information; an intelligencer. [Obs.]
--Holinshed.
[1913 Webster] |
Intelligently (gcide) | Intelligently \In*tel"li*gent*ly\, adv.
In an intelligent manner; with intelligence.
[1913 Webster] |
intelligentsia (gcide) | intelligentsia \intelligentsia\ n.
an educated and intellectual[2] elite; intellectuals,
collectively or considered as a class.
[WordNet 1.5 +PJC] |
Unintelligent (gcide) | Unintelligent \Unintelligent\
See intelligent. |
intelligent (wn) | intelligent
adj 1: having the capacity for thought and reason especially to
a high degree; "is there intelligent life in the
universe?"; "an intelligent question" [ant: stupid,
unintelligent]
2: possessing sound knowledge; "well-informed readers" [syn:
intelligent, well-informed]
3: exercising or showing good judgment; "healthy scepticism"; "a
healthy fear of rattlesnakes"; "the healthy attitude of
French laws"; "healthy relations between labor and
management"; "an intelligent solution"; "a sound approach to
the problem"; "sound advice"; "no sound explanation for his
decision" [syn: healthy, intelligent, levelheaded,
level-headed, sound]
4: endowed with the capacity to reason [syn: intelligent,
reasoning(a), thinking(a)] |
intelligently (wn) | intelligently
adv 1: in an intelligent manner; "she acted intelligently in
this difficult situation" [ant: unintelligently] |
intelligentsia (wn) | intelligentsia
n 1: an educated and intellectual elite [syn: intelligentsia,
clerisy] |
unintelligent (wn) | unintelligent
adj 1: lacking intelligence; "a dull job with lazy and
unintelligent co-workers" [syn: unintelligent,
stupid] [ant: intelligent] |
unintelligently (wn) | unintelligently
adv 1: in an unintelligent manner; "he acted rather
unintelligently in this crisis" [ant: intelligently] |
advanced intelligent tape (foldoc) | Advanced Intelligent Tape
AIT
(AIT) A form of magnetic tape and drive using
AME developed by Sony for storing large amounts of data.
An AIT can store over 50 gigabytes and transfer data at six
megabytes/second (in February 1999). AIT features high speed
file access, long head and media life, the ALDC compression
algorithm, and a MIC chip.
(http://aittape.com/).
{Seagate
(http://seagate.com/support/tape/scsiide/sidewinder/ait_main_page.shtml)}.
(1999-04-16)
|
intelligent backtracking (foldoc) | intelligent backtracking
An improved backtracking algorithm for
Prolog interpreters, which records the point at which each
logic variable becomes bound and, when a given set of
bindings leads to failure, ignores any choice point which
does not bind any of those variables. No choice from such a
choice point can succeed since it does not change the bindings
which caused the failure.
(1996-04-06)
|
intelligent database (foldoc) | intelligent database
A database management system which performs data
validation and processing traditionally done by {application
programs}. Most DBMSs provide some data validation,
e.g. rejecting invalid dates or alphabetic data entered into
money fields, but often most processing is done by application
programs. There is however no limit to the amount of
processing that can be done by an intelligent database as long
as the process is a standard function for that data.
Examples of techniques used to implement intelligent databases
are constraints, triggers and stored procedures.
Moving processing to the database aids data integrity
because it is guaranteed to be consistent across all uses of
the data. Mainframe databases have increasingly become more
intelligent and personal computer database systems are rapidly
following.
(1998-10-07)
|
intelligent i/o (foldoc) | Intelligent Input/Output
I2O
Intelligent I/O
/i:-too-oh/ (I2O) A specification which aims to
provide an I/O device driver architecture that is
independent of both the specific device being controlled and
the host operating system. The Hardware Device Module (HDM)
manages the device and the OS Services Module (OSM) interfaces
to the host operating system. The HDM is portable across
multiple operating systems, processors and busses. The HDM
and OSM communicate via a two layer message passing
protocol. A Message Layer sets up a communications session
and runs on top of a Transport Layer which defines how the two
parties share information.
I2O is also designed to facilitate intelligent I/O subsystems,
with support for message passing between multiple
independent processors. By relieving the host of interrupt
intensive I/O tasks required by the various layers of a driver
architecture, the I2O intelligent I/O architecture greatly
improves I/O performance. I2O systems will be able to more
efficiently deliver the I/O throughput required by a wide
range of high bandwidth applications, such as networked
video, groupware and client-server processing. I2O does
not restrict where the layered modules execute, providing
support for single processor, multiprocessor, and
clustered systems.
I2O is not intended to replace the driver architectures
currently in existence. Rather, the objective is to provide
an open, standards-based approach, which is complementary to
existing drivers, and provides a framework for the rapid
development of a new generation of portable, intelligent I/O.
(http://i2osig.org/).
(1997-11-04)
|
intelligent input/output (foldoc) | Intelligent Input/Output
I2O
Intelligent I/O
/i:-too-oh/ (I2O) A specification which aims to
provide an I/O device driver architecture that is
independent of both the specific device being controlled and
the host operating system. The Hardware Device Module (HDM)
manages the device and the OS Services Module (OSM) interfaces
to the host operating system. The HDM is portable across
multiple operating systems, processors and busses. The HDM
and OSM communicate via a two layer message passing
protocol. A Message Layer sets up a communications session
and runs on top of a Transport Layer which defines how the two
parties share information.
I2O is also designed to facilitate intelligent I/O subsystems,
with support for message passing between multiple
independent processors. By relieving the host of interrupt
intensive I/O tasks required by the various layers of a driver
architecture, the I2O intelligent I/O architecture greatly
improves I/O performance. I2O systems will be able to more
efficiently deliver the I/O throughput required by a wide
range of high bandwidth applications, such as networked
video, groupware and client-server processing. I2O does
not restrict where the layered modules execute, providing
support for single processor, multiprocessor, and
clustered systems.
I2O is not intended to replace the driver architectures
currently in existence. Rather, the objective is to provide
an open, standards-based approach, which is complementary to
existing drivers, and provides a framework for the rapid
development of a new generation of portable, intelligent I/O.
(http://i2osig.org/).
(1997-11-04)
|
intelligent key (foldoc) | intelligent key
A relational database key which depends wholly
on one or more other columns in the same table. An
intelligent key might be identified for implementation
convenience, where there is no good candidate key.
For example, if the three-letter initials of a group of people
are known to be unique but only their full names are recorded,
a three letter acronym for their names (e.g. John Doe Smith ->
JDS) would be an intelligent key.
Intelligent keys are a Bad Thing because it is hard to
guarantee uniqueness, and if the value on which an intelligent
key depends changes then the key must either stay the same,
creating an inconsistency within the containing table, or
change, requiring changes to all other tables in which it
appears as a foreign key. The correct solution is to use a
surrogate key.
(1999-12-07)
|
intelligent terminal (foldoc) | intelligent terminal
smart terminal
(or "smart terminal", "programmable terminal") A
terminal that often contains not only a keyboard and screen,
but also comes with a disk drive and printer, so it can
perform limited processing tasks when not communicating
directly with the central computer. Some can be programmed by
the user to perform many basic tasks, including both
arithmetic and logic operations. In some cases, when the user
enters data, the data will be checked for errors and some
type of report will be produced. In addition, the valid data
that is entered may be stored on the disk, it will be
transmitted over communication lines to the central computer.
An intelligent terminal may have enough computing capability
to draw graphics or to offload some kind of front-end
processing from the computer it talks to.
The development of workstations and personal computers has
made this term and the product it describes semi-obsolescent,
but one may still hear variants of the phrase "act like a
smart terminal" used to describe the behaviour of workstations
or PCs with respect to programs that execute almost entirely
out of a remote server's storage, using said devices as
displays.
The term once meant any terminal with an addressable cursor;
the opposite of a glass tty. Today, a terminal with merely
an addressable cursor, but with none of the more-powerful
features mentioned above, is called a dumb terminal.
There is a classic quote from Rob Pike (inventor of the blit
terminal): "A smart terminal is not a smart*ass* terminal, but
rather a terminal you can educate". This illustrates a common
design problem: The attempt to make peripherals (or anything
else) intelligent sometimes results in finicky, rigid "special
features" that become just so much dead weight if you try to
use the device in any way the designer didn't anticipate.
Flexibility and programmability, on the other hand, are
*really* smart.
Compare hook.
(1995-04-14)
|
red brick intelligent sql (foldoc) | Red Brick Intelligent SQL
RISQL
(RISQL) A vendor-specific extension to SQL
designed specifically for business managers. It augments SQL
with a variety of operations appropriate to data analysis and
decision support applications such as ranking, moving
averages, comparisons, market share, this year vs. last year,
etc. It was developed to simplify the creation of complex
business queries.
{Home
(http://redbrick.com/products/white/papers/risql/risql.html)}.
(1998-10-15)
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