Term
|
Description
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Default
|
That which is chosen by the Operating System or
program if the user doesn't specify something different.
E.g.
default drive, default printer, default directory, etc..
|
Defragment
|
Your computer can slow down when files become
fragmented. This means that the clusters the file is stored in are not
physically next to each other on the disk. The read/write heads have to
travel further to read the file. By defragmenting, files are rewritten to the
disk in contiguous clusters thus speeding up data retrieval.
|
Desktop
|
When an Operating System that uses a Graphical
User Interface (GUI) is finished loading, the screen that is initially
displayed is called the Desktop. When you run a program or open a folder it
appears in a window on the Desktop.
|
Device Driver
|
Individual programs can access communication
ports or expansion slots either directly or via the OS or BIOS. However,
there is such a vast number of different devices available to hook up to your
computer that it can't be expected to know how to use the features of all of
them. Most devices are shipped with small programs that are loaded onto your
hard drive and tell the computer how to communicate with that specific
input/output device whether it be a modem, printer, video card, etc.. These
small software programs are called Drivers and are specific to each make and
model of the device it comes with.
|
Diffuse
|
A technique to create a gray-scale image. Pixel
patterns aren't set; they change gradually throughout the image.
|
DIMM
|
Dual Inline Memory Module. A small printed
circuit board with memory chips on it. These modules clip into sockets on the
motherboard to make up your system RAM. They come in denominations of 16, 32,
64, and 128 MB.
|
DIP Switch
|
A small switch on a circuit board or some other
device that holds configuration or setup information for that device.
|
Directory
|
A table made by the Operating System that
contains file information such as file name, size, date created, and the
file's beginning cluster number.
|
Display Adapter
|
An adapter board or interface card that fits into
a slot on the motherboard and controls the video signal sent to the monitor.
|
Dither
|
To create a gray-scale image by using fixed
patterns of black and white pixels to represent each shade of gray. Every
time the image needs a particular shade of gray, the software uses the same
pattern.
|
DLL
|
Dynamic Link Library. A file that contains
several small programs or routines that are common to many programs such as
opening a window or saving a file. These library files have a .dll extension.
|
DMA
|
Direct Memory Access is an electronic pathway or
direct channel on which a device can bypass the CPU and send data directly to
memory. A DMA channel is often one of the resources assigned when configuring
an expansion card or device such as a sound card.
|
Documentation
|
Manuals, tutorials, and Help files that provide
information that a user needs in order to use a computer system or software
application.
|
Domain
|
On TCP/IP networks, such as the Internet, a
domain is a group of connected computers. Domains are identified on the
Internet by a two or three letter code. Some of the most common are: .com -
commercial site, .edu - educational institution, .gov - government site, .net
- network site, .org - non-profit or private organization, .ca - a Canadian
site. A domain can also refer to a group of workstations on a network. There
can be sub-domains within a domain.
|
Domain Name
|
An identifying name given to a system or group of
computers on a network. For example, the domain name computerstuff.com
indicates that the domain is a commercial site (.com) and that the sub-domain
name is computerstuff.
|
Dot Pitch
|
The distance between pixels of the same color on
a monitor screen.
|
DRAM
|
Dynamic Random Access Memory. The most common
type of system RAM. It comes in several different flavors, EDO, FPM, SDRAM.
It uses less space, less power, and is cheaper than static RAM, but it has to
be refreshed every millisecond or it loses its information.
|
Driver
|
See Device Driver.
|
DriveSpace
|
DriveSpace is a Microsoft utility that is
supposed to increase the amount of space on your hard drive. What it actually
does is compress the files on your drive and create a single large file that
contains all the compressed. The compression and decompression takes place in
the background, unnoticeable to the user.
|
Dual Boot
|
The ability to boot your computer using one of
two different operating systems.
|
Dual Voltage CPU
|
A Central Processing Unit that requires two
different voltages, one for external functions and one for internal
processing.
|
DVD
|
Digital Video Disk. A type of CD-ROM format that
is faster and can hold more data than a regular CD-ROM. It still has the
ability to read older CDs, but a DVD disk can hold more than 8 gigabytes (as
opposed to 750 Mb) and can display full-motion picture videos.
|
Dynamic RAM
|
See DRAM.
|