slovodefinícia
sharing
(mass)
sharing
- zdieľajúci, zdieľanie
sharing
(encz)
sharing,dělení [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač
sharing
(encz)
sharing,sdílení n: Zdeněk Brož
Sharing
(gcide)
Share \Share\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Shared; p. pr. & vb. n.
Sharing.]
1. To part among two or more; to distribute in portions; to
divide.
[1913 Webster]

Suppose I share my fortune equally between my
children and a stranger. --Swift.
[1913 Webster]

2. To partake of, use, or experience, with others; to have a
portion of; to take and possess in common; as, to share a
shelter with another.
[1913 Webster]

While avarice and rapine share the land. --Milton.
[1913 Webster]

3. To cut; to shear; to cleave; to divide. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]

The shared visage hangs on equal sides. --Dryden.
[1913 Webster]
sharing
(wn)
sharing
adj 1: unselfishly willing to share with others; "a warm and
sharing friend"
n 1: using or enjoying something jointly with others
2: having in common; "the sharing of electrons creates
molecules"
3: sharing thoughts and feelings [syn: communion, sharing]
4: a distribution in shares [syn: sharing, share-out]
podobné slovodefinícia
sharing
(mass)
sharing
- zdieľajúci, zdieľanie
economic data sharing system
(encz)
Economic Data Sharing System,
extended burden sharing
(encz)
extended burden sharing,
extension of burden sharing
(encz)
extension of burden sharing,
job-sharing
(encz)
job-sharing,sdílení pracovního místa n: Zdeněk Brožjob-sharing,sdílení pracovního místa více zaměstnanci Zdeněk Brož
market sharing arrangement
(encz)
market sharing arrangement,
power-sharing
(encz)
power-sharing,
production sharing contract
(encz)
production sharing contract,
profit sharing
(encz)
profit sharing,podíl na zisku Zdeněk Brožprofit sharing,účast na zisku Zdeněk Brož
profit-sharing
(encz)
profit-sharing,dělení zisku (podílení se na zisku) [eko.] RNDr. Pavel
Piskač
revenue sharing
(encz)
revenue sharing, n:
revenue sharing grant
(encz)
revenue sharing grant,
sharing
(encz)
sharing,dělení [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskačsharing,sdílení n: Zdeněk Brož
sharing clause
(encz)
sharing clause,
tax revenue sharing
(encz)
tax revenue sharing,
time sharing
(encz)
time sharing, n:
time-sharing
(encz)
time-sharing,
timesharing
(encz)
timesharing,sdílení času Zdeněk Brož
person of opposite sex sharing living quarters
(czen)
Person of Opposite Sex Sharing Living Quarters,POSSLQ[zkr.]
profit sharing
(wn)
profit sharing
n 1: a system in which employees receive a share of the net
profits of the business
revenue sharing
(wn)
revenue sharing
n 1: distribution of part of the federal tax income to states
and municipalities
sharing
(wn)
sharing
adj 1: unselfishly willing to share with others; "a warm and
sharing friend"
n 1: using or enjoying something jointly with others
2: having in common; "the sharing of electrons creates
molecules"
3: sharing thoughts and feelings [syn: communion, sharing]
4: a distribution in shares [syn: sharing, share-out]
time sharing
(wn)
time sharing
n 1: (computer science) the use of a central computer by many
users simultaneously
compatible timesharing system
(foldoc)
Compatible Timesharing System
CTSS

(CTSS) One of the earliest (1963)
experiments in the design of interactive time-sharing
operating systems. CTSS was ancestral to Multics, Unix,
and ITS. It was developed at the MIT Computation Center
by a team led by Fernando J. Corbato. CTSS ran on a modified
IBM 7094 with a second 32K-word bank of memory, using two
2301 drums for swapping. Remote access was provided to up
to 30 users via an IBM 7750 communications controller
connected to dial-up modems.

The name ITS (Incompatible time-sharing System) was a hack
on CTSS, meant both as a joke and to express some basic
differences in philosophy about the way I/O services should be
presented to user programs.

(1997-01-29)
knowledge sharing effort
(foldoc)
Knowledge Sharing Effort

An ARPA project developing techniques and methods
for building large-scale knowledge bases which are sharable
and reusable.

KQML is part of it.

(1999-09-28)
screen sharing
(foldoc)
screen sharing

Audiographic Teleconferencing
time sharing option
(foldoc)
Time Sharing Option
TSO

(TSO) System software from IBM that
provides time-sharing on an IBM mainframe running in an
MVS environment.

(2003-08-15)
time-sharing
(foldoc)
time-sharing

(Or "timesharing") An operating system
feature allowing several users to run several tasks
concurrently on one processor, or in parallel on many
processors, usually providing each user with his own terminal
for input and output. time-sharing is multi-user
multitasking.

(2009-11-23)
sharing violation
(jargon)
sharing violation


[From a file error common to several OSes] A response to receiving
information, typically of an excessively personal nature, that you were
probably happier not knowing. “You know those little noises that Pat makes
in bed?” “Whoa! Sharing violation!” In contrast to the original file error,
which indicated that you were not being given data that you did want.
timesharing
(jargon)
timesharing


[now primarily historical] Timesharing is the technique of scheduling a
computer's time so that they are shared across multiple tasks and multiple
users, with each user having the illusion that his or her computation is
going on continuously. John McCarthy, the inventor of LISP, first
imagined this technique in the late 1950s. The first timesharing operating
systems, BBN's "Little Hospital" and CTSS, were deplayed in 1962-63. The
early hacker culture of the 1960s and 1970s grew up around the first
generation of relatively cheap timesharing computers, notably the DEC 10,
11, and VAX lines. But these were only cheap in a relative sense; though
quite a bit less powerful than today's personal computers, they had to be
shared by dozens or even hundreds of people each. The early hacker
comunities nucleated around places where it was relatively easy to get
access to a timesharing account.

Nowadays, communications bandwidth is usually the most important constraint
on what you can do with your computer. Not so back then; timesharing
machines were often loaded to capacity, and it was not uncommon for
everyone's work to grind to a halt while the machine scheduler thrashed,
trying to figure out what to do next. Early hacker slang was replete with
terms like cycle crunch and cycle drought for describing the consequences
of too few instructions-per-second spread among too many users. As GLS has
noted, this sort of problem influenced the tendency of many hackers to work
odd schedules.

One reason this is worth noting here is to make the point that the earliest
hacker communities were physical, not distributed via networks; they
consisted of hackers who shared a machine and therefore had to deal with
many of the same problems with respect to it. A system crash could idle
dozens of eager programmers, all sitting in the same terminal room and with
little to do but talk with each other until normal operation resumed.

Timesharing moved from being the luxury of a few large universities runing
semi-experimental operating systems to being more generally available about
1975-76. Hackers in search of more cycles and more control over their
programming environment began to migrate off timesharing machines and onto
what are now called workstations around 1983. It took another ten years,
the development of powerful 32-bit personal micros, the {Great Internet
Explosion} before the migration was complete. It is no coincidence that the
last stages of this migration coincided with the development of the first
open-source operating systems.

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