104. Occur Tekkida 131. Sophisticated Keerukamaid 105. Peripheral perifeerne 132. Source Allikas 106. Permits Lubasid 133. Squeezing Pigistada 107. Persuade Veenma 134. Standardized Standardiseeritud 108. Pixels Pikslit 135. Streams Voolud 109. Platters Vaagnad 136. String rida 110. Pollutant Saasteaine 137. Subroutines Alamfunktsioonid 111. Precision Täpsus 138. Surplus Ülejääk 112. Predecessor Eelkäija 139. Syllabus Õppekava 113. Predetermined Ettemääratud 140. Through Läbi 114. Presumably Eeldatavasti 141. Transfer ülekanne 115. Principle Põhimõte 142. Underlying Aluseks 116. Pristine Algeline 143. Utilized Kasutatud 117. Proficient Vilunud 144
Switching - Base current on, collector current flows - Switching; Amplification - Base current regulates large amount of collector current. 1949 Maurice Wilkes assembled the EDSAC, the first practical stored-program computer, at Cambridge University. His ideas grew out of the Moore School lectures he had attended three years earlier. For programming the EDSAC, Wilkes established a library of short programs called subroutines stored on punched paper tapes. TECHNOLOGY: vacuum tubes MEMORY: 1K words, 17 bits, mercury delay line SPEED: 714 operations per second 1950 Engineering Research Associates of Minneapolis built the ERA 1101, the first commercially produced computer; the company's first customer was the U.S. Navy. It held 1 million bits on its magnetic drum, the earliest magnetic storage devices. Drums registered information as magnetic pulses in tracks around a metal cylinder.
20CDT-D(-V1)/20CDT1-D(-V1)/ 30CDR-j(-V1)/30CDT-D(-V1)/ 30CDT1-D(-V1)/40CDR-j(-V1)/ 40CDT-D(-V1)/40CDT1-D(-V1) Note When not using as interrupt input terminals, the input bits IR 00003 to IR 00006 can be used as normal input terminals. ! Caution Although IORF(97) can be used in interrupt subroutines, you must be careful of the interval between IORF(97) executions. If IORF(97) is executed too frequent- ly, a fatal system error may occur (FALS 9F), stopping operation. The interval between executions of IORF(97) should be at least 1.3 ms + total execution time of the interrupt subroutine.
intelligence. He drew on his World War II experiments with anti-aircraft systems that anticipated the course of enemy planes by interpreting radar images. 1949 Maurice Wilkes assembled the EDSAC, the first practical stored-program computer, at Cambridge University. His ideas grew out of the Moore School lectures he had attended three years earlier. For programming the EDSAC, Wilkes established a library of short programs called subroutines stored on punched paper tapes. TECHNOLOGY: vacuum tubes MEMORY: 1K words, 17 bits, mercury delay line SPEED: 714 operations per second 1950 Engineering Research Associates of Minneapolis built the ERA 1101, the first commercially produced computer; the company's first customer was the U.S. Navy. It held 1 million bits on its magnetic drum, the earliest magnetic storage devices. Drums registered information as magnetic pulses in tracks around a metal cylinder
BISDN Broadband Integrated Services Digital Network BIST Built-In Self-Test BiSYNC (See BSYNC) BIT Binary Digit BITNET Because It's Time Network BITNIC Bitnet Network Information Center BIU Bus Interface Unit BIW Business Intelligence Warehouse [SAP] BIX Byte Information Exchange (BBS) .BIZ Businesses (Domain Name) [Internet] .BK! Backup (file name extension) [WordPerfect] .B~K Backup (file name extension) BKSP Backspace BL Backlit + Bit Line BLAS Basic Linear Algebra Subroutines BLAST Bell Labs Layered Space Time + Blocked Asynchronous Transmission (protocol) [Communications Research Group] .BLD BASIC Bload Graphics (file name extension) BLE Branch if Less or Equal BLER Block Error BLI Business Logic Integration [Microsoft] BLK Block BLMC Buried Logic Macrocell BLOB Binary Large Object BLOG Web Log BLOS Branch if Lower Or Same BMI Branch if Minus BMIC BusMaster Interface Controller [Intel]