Term
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Description
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C:
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A letter followed by a colon is used to designate
a drive (physical or virtual) on your computer. C: drive is usually the hard
drive inside the case that your computer boots from (contains the operating
system files).
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Cab File
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A cabinet file contains several or many
compressed files. These files are generally used to distribute software on
disk and have a .cab file extension. Most of the files for Windows95/98 are
in Cab files on the Setup Disk. The Extract command is used to extract one or
more files from the cabinet file.
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Cable
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Wires or a bundle of wires in a protective
plastic or rubber covering, with connectors used to join the different
components, peripherals and resources associated with your computer system.
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Cache
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An area of high speed memory set aside to store
frequently accessed data. When data is accessed, a copy (and its address in
memory) is stored in cache memory. The next time the CPU looks for
information, it first checks the cache. If the data is there (called a hit),
it can retrieve it from the much faster cache memory. If it is not, then it
accesses system memory, puts a copy of the new data in the cache, and
processes the information. Disk caching and memory caching significantly
improves the overall speed of the computer but there are limits.
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CAD
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Computer Aided Design - See CAD/CAM.
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CAD/CAM
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Computer Aided Design/Computer Aided
Manufacturing. The use of computers to design and manufacture a product. The
product is designed on a computer (using a CAD program) and then built or
assembled using computers designed specifically for that process.
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Calibrate
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The process of testing a measuring device (such
as a joystick) and then manipulating or changing its settings to conform to a
set standard ensuring the device is working accurately.
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Cancel
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A button in most dialogue boxes in a graphical
user interface that will exit the box without making any changes. Any
settings that were changed will return to what they were before the box was
open.
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Capacitor
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An electronic component that can store and
maintain an electrical charge for a period of time, releasing it cleanly and
evenly. Capacitors are used to smooth out the flow of electricity.
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CAPS LOCK Key
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A key on the left side of your keyboard. When
pressed it changes all typed letters to capitals until it is pressed again.
It only affects letters; not punctuation, symbols or numbers.
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Card
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Refers to a printed circuit board (adapter board
or expansion card) that installs into one of the expansion slots in your computer,
expanding the capabilities of your system, allowing it to communicate with
external devices such as monitors or speakers.
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Case
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The format of a letter. It can be uppercase
(capitalized) or lowercase (not capitalized).
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Case Sensitive
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A program or function that differentiates between
capital and non-capitalized letters or words. Something that is not case
sensitive would view 'target' and 'TARGET' as the same word. A case sensitive
program would see two different words.
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Cathode Ray Tube
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The display screen used in most monitors and
television sets. An electron gun, at the back of the tube, shoots electrons
at a phosphor coated screen, scanning from top to bottom, left to right. This
causes the phosphor pixels to glow which creates the picture you see on the
screen.
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CD-R
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A Compact Disk (CD) device that can write data to
a CD. Once written, this data cannot be erased or written over.
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CD-RW
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A Compact Disk (CD) device that can write or
record data to a CD. This CD device can then erase or write over (re-write)
the data previously recorded.
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Cell
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Spreadsheets and tables can be broken up into
individual columns and rows which intersect forming smaller boxes or cells.
Cell C8 would be the box at the intersection of column B and row 8. These
boxes can hold different formulas, text or numbers.
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Central Processing Unit
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The central processing unit (CPU) is an
integrated circuit chip (IC) that controls and directs the activities of the
computer. Considered the 'brain' of your computer, it is identified by
manufacturer, model, and processing speed in megahertz (MHz). Major manufacturers
include Intel, Motorola, Cyrix, AMD(Advanced Micro Devices), and IBM. Intel
is considered to be the #1 manufacturer and sets the standards for
processors.
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Centronics Connector
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Named after the company that originally developed
the standard, this connector can be found on the back of many of today's
printers (36 pins). It's a parallel interface that has eight data lines and
lines for control and status information. It can also be found on scanners
and SCSI devices (50 pins).
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CGA
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Color Graphics Adapter. One of the first color
display adapter cards. It had a palette of 16 colors but could only display 4
at a resolution of 320 X 200 pixels. Even in monochrome (one color) it had
poor resolution for graphics (640 X 200 pixels).
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Chain
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A chain is a group of clusters on a storage disk,
linked together to contain a single file.
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Chipset
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A group of microchips that actually control the
flow of information on your computer. They are the controllers for the
memory, cache, hard drive, keyboard, etc.. These groups of chips direct
traffic along the bus and can allow devices to talk to each other without
having to go through the CPU.
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Circuit Board
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Boards used in electronic devices that are made
from an insulating material and contain electronic components that are
interconnected to form a circuit or group of circuits that perform a specific
function.
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Client
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A computer hooked to a network, that uses data or
programs that are located on another computer (server).
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Clock Speed
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The clock speed is the frequency which determines
how fast devices that are connected to the system bus operate. The speed is
measured in millions of cycles per second (MHz or megahertz) and is generated
by a quartz crystal on the motherboard which acts as a kind of metronome.
Devices that are synchronized with the clock may run faster or slower but
their speed is determined by multiplying or dividing a factor by the clock
speed.
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Cluster
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A cluster is made up of one or more sectors and
is the smallest allocation unit that your computer can write to a disk.
Cluster size (number of sectors/cluster) depends on type and size of your
hard drive and the Operating System that you are using. If you write a very
small file, it is still going to take up a full cluster on your hard drive.
If your file is large then it will be written to a group of clusters that are
linked together to form a cluster chain.
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CMOS
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Complimentary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor. This is
one of two technologies used to produce or manufacture microchips. The other
is TTL or Transistor Transistor Logic. Although CMOS is a little slower and
much more susceptible to ESD or static electricity, it uses less power and
generates a lot less heat and has replaced the bulkier chips in PCs. All of
today's CPUs and memory chips are CMOS chips. Because your computer's
configuration or setup is stored in a CMOS chip, it has sometimes been
labeled CMOS setup, or just plain CMOS. So if someone suggests you check your
CMOS, they mean you should look in your setup program.
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COAST
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Cache memory is generally hard-wired to the
system board. However, you can often add to or upgrade your systems cache by
inserting a cache memory module into a socket on the motherboard. These
modules are called Cache On A Stick, or COAST modules.
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Cold Boot
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Starting the computer from a power-off status. If
your computer is off, and you turn the switch on, you're performing a Cold
Boot.
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COM Port
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See communications port.
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COMMAND.COM
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This is the command interpreter that interprets
the commands received from the operator (or an application) into something
the computer can understand. It can accept commands from the user, launch
programs and pass this information to the computer, or the other operating
system files.
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Communications Port
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Serial ports used to connect modems, serial
printers and other peripherals to your computer. Each port is assigned its
own individual number, IO address, and Interrupt Request Line. COM1 and COM2
are usually the physical serial ports you can see on the back of your
computer (9-pin and 25-pin DB connectors). COM3 and COM4 are usually virtual
communications ports for internal devices connected via the expansion slots
inside your computer.
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Compression
Algorithm |
A process that reduces the size of a graphics
file. Sometimes, the more you compress, the less detail you have. Examples of
compression algorithms include .LZW and .JPG.
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CONFIG.SYS
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A user-configurable text file, in the MS-DOS
Operating System, that usually contains device drivers and system setup
files. During the bootup process in MS-DOS, CONFIG.SYS is located and the
external device drivers and configuration options in that file are loaded.
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Conventional Memory
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Relating to the DOS memory map, conventional
memory is the memory addresses between 0 and 640K. MS Dos requires the
Operating System, Vector Table, and all programs to load and run in this
small amount of memory. While trying to maintain backwards compatibility with
the older OS, newer programs and Operating Systems have had to deal with what
is termed the 640K barrier.
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Cookie
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A file written to your hard drive that Web sites
use to track visitors. When you visit a Web site, a file (cookie) may be
added to your hard drive or updated to include information such as the time
and date, which pages you visited, any passwords you might need for the site,
and any other information you might have contributed at their request.
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Coprocessor
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A separate chip (or nowadays, a portion of the
CPU) that performs a lot of the calculations and number crunching for the microprocessor,
relieving the CPU of some of its work and thus enhancing the overall speed of
the system.
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Corrupted Files
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Any file that has been damaged or ruined. This
can happen for a variety of reasons; Program glitches, crashes, user error,
power failures, power spikes, memory problems.. There are different
precautions you can take to reduce the chance of corrupted files, but you
will experience them.
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CPU
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See Central Processing Unit.
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Crop
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To delete unwanted portions of an image.
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Cross-linked Clusters
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Files are stored on your hard disk in chains of
clusters linked together. Which clusters are used and how they are linked is
stored in an index or directory called the File Allocation Table or FAT. If,
through some error, the FAT shows two files using the same cluster, then they
are cross-linked.
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CRT
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See Cathode Ray Tube.
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