- Industry: Computer
- Number of terms: 318110
- Number of blossaries: 26
- Company Profile:
An American multinational software corporation headquartered in Redmond, Washington that develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of products and services related to computing.
To search for new tape libraries and stand-alone tape drives attached to the DPM server, and for storage nodes managed by the DPM server.
Industry:Computer
A user who can schedule meetings, send invitations, do all the sharing activities in a meeting, and admit participants from the lobby.
Industry:Computer
An audio message that is played when a user first dials in to a Unified Messaging system that describes some temporary condition of interest to all users.
Industry:Computer
The general class of microcontrollers used to support OEM-specific implementation, mainly in mobile environments. The embedded controller performs complex low-level functions through a simple interface to the host microprocessor(s).
Industry:Computer
Embedding a limited number of characters specific to one font, reducing file size.
Industry:Computer
A named storage area on a computer containing files and other folders. Folders are used to organize information electronically, the same way actual folders in a filing cabinet do.
Industry:Computer
The task that encapsulates the data flow engine that moves data between sources and destinations, providing the facility to transform, clean, and modify data as it is moved.
Industry:Computer
A structured collection of tools, templates, libraries, documents, and other assets. The factory extends an integrated development environment with a custom process used to build a specific type of software system, application, or component.
Industry:Computer
An administrative role for PerformancePoint Server that allows members to perform any modeling operation within their scope (application or model site).
Industry:Computer
Noise that contains components at all frequencies, at least within the frequency band of interest. It is called "white" by analogy to white light, which contains light at all the visible frequencies. In the audible spectrum, white noise is a hiss or a roar, such as that produced when a television set is tuned to a channel over which no station is broadcasting.
Industry:Computer