Dell XPS M140 (MXC051, Late 2005) User Manual

Page 169

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Glossary

169

O

optical drive — A drive that uses optical technology to

read or write data from CDs, DVDs, or DVD+RWs.

Example of optical drives include CD drives, DVD drives,

CD-RW drives, and CD-RW/DVD combo drives.

P

parallel connector — An I/O port often used to connect a

parallel printer to your computer. Also referred to as an

LPT port.
partition — A physical storage area on a hard drive that is

assigned to one or more logical storage areas known as

logical drives. Each partition can contain multiple logical

drives.
PC Card — A removable I/O card adhering to the

PCMCIA standard. Modems and network adapters are

common types of PC Cards.
PCI — peripheral component interconnect — PCI is a

local bus that supports 32-and 64-bit data paths,

providing a high-speed data path between the processor

and devices such as video, drives, and networks.
PCI Express — A modification to the PCI interface that

boosts the data transfer rate between the processor and

the devices attached to it. PCI Express can transfer data at

speeds from 250 MB/sec to 4 GB/sec. If the PCI Express

chip set and the device are capable of different speeds,

they will operate at the slower speed.
PCMCIA — Personal Computer Memory Card

International Association — The organization that

establishes standards for PC Cards.
PIN — personal identification number — A sequence of

numerals and/or letters used to restrict unauthorized

access to computer networks and other secure systems.
PIO — programmed input/output — A method of

transferring data between two devices through the

processor as part of the data path.
pixel — A single point on a display screen. Pixels are

arranged in rows and columns to create an image. A video

resolution, such as 800 x 600, is expressed as the number

of pixels across by the number of pixels up and down.

Plug-and-Play — The ability of the computer to

automatically configure devices. Plug and Play provides

automatic installation, configuration, and compatibility

with existing hardware if the BIOS, operating system, and

all devices are Plug and Play compliant.
POST — power-on self-test — Diagnostics programs,

loaded automatically by the BIOS, that perform basic

tests on the major computer components, such as

memory, hard drives, and video. If no problems are

detected during POST, the computer continues the

start-up.
processor — A computer chip that interprets and executes

program instructions. Sometimes the processor is referred

to as the CPU (central processing unit).
program — Any software that processes data for you,

including spreadsheet, word processor, database, and

game packages. Programs require an operating system to

run.
PS/2 — personal system/2 — A type of connector for

attaching a PS/2-compatible keyboard, mouse, or keypad.
PXE — pre-boot execution environment — A WfM

(Wired for Management) standard that allows networked

computers that do not have an operating system to be

configured and started remotely.

R

RAID — redundant array of independent disks — A

method of providing data redundancy. Some common

implementations of RAID include RAID 0, RAID 1,

RAID 5, RAID 10, and RAID 50.
RAM — random-access memory — The primary

temporary storage area for program instructions and data.

Any information stored in RAM is lost when you shut

down your computer.
readme file — A text file included with a software package

or hardware product. Typically, readme files provide

installation information and describe new product

enhancements or corrections that have not yet been

documented.

book.book Page 169 Wednesday, October 26, 2005 1:00 PM

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