Toshiba NB250 User Manual

Page 181

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Glossary

181

Central Processing Unit (CPU)—The chip that functions as the “brain”

of the computer. It takes information from outside sources, such as
memory or keyboard input, processes the information, and sends the
results to another device that uses the information.

character—Any letter, number, or symbol you can use on the computer.

Some characters are non-printing characters, such as a paragraph
break in a word-processing program. A character occupies one byte
of computer storage.

chip—A small piece of silicon containing computer logic and circuits for

processing, memory, input/output, and/or control functions. Chips
are mounted on printed circuit boards.

click—To press and release the pointing device’s primary button without

moving the pointing device. In the Windows

®

operating system, this

refers to the pointing device’s left button, unless otherwise stated.
See also double-click.

color palette—A set of specified colors that establishes the colors that

can be displayed on the screen at a particular time.

compatibility—The extent to which computers, programs, or devices

can work together harmoniously, using the same commands,
formats, or language as another.

configuration—(1) The collection of components that make up a single

computer system. (2) How parts of the system are set up (that is,
configured).

controller—A device that controls the transfer of data from a computer

to a peripheral device and vice versa. For example, disk drives,
monitors, keyboards, and printers all require controllers.

CPU—See Central Processing Unit (CPU).

CPU cache—A section of very fast memory residing between the CPU

and the computer’s main memory that temporarily stores data and
instructions the CPU will need to execute commands and programs.
See also cache, L1 cache, L2 cache.

cursor—An on-screen symbol (usually a flashing vertical line) that

indicates the position where characters will appear when you enter
data.

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