Toshiba 1805 User Manual

Page 248

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Glossary
Terms

248

Standby — A feature of some Windows

®

operating systems that allows

you to turn off the computer without exiting your open applications
and to continue from where you left off when you turn the computer
on again.

Suspend — A feature of some Windows

®

operating systems that allows

you to turn off the computer without exiting your open applications
and to continue from where you left off when you turn the computer
on again.

system disk — A diskette that contains the operating system files needed

to start the computer. Any diskette can be formatted as a system disk.
A system disk is also called a “bootable disk” or a “startup disk.”
Compare non-system disk.

system prompt — The symbol (in MS-DOS, generally a drive letter

followed by a “greater than” sign) indicating where users are to enter
commands.

T

TFT display — See active-matrix display.

U

universal serial bus (USB) — A serial bus that supports a data transfer

rate of up to 12 Mbps (12 million bits per second). USB can connect
up to 127 peripheral devices through a single all-purpose USB port.
USB allows hot swapping of peripherals. See also bus, hot swapping,
serial.

upload — To send a file to another computer through a modem or

network. See also download.

USB— See universal serial bus (USB).

utility — A computer program designed to perform a narrowly focused

operation or solve a specific problem. Utilities are often related to
computer system management.

V

W

Web — See World Wide Web.

Wi-Fi — A trademarked term by the Wireless Capability Ethernet

Alliance which stands for Wireless Fidelity. Wi-Fi is another term for
the IEEE 2.11b communication protocol to permit an Ethernet
connection using wireless communication components.

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