Dell OptiPlex SX260 User Manual

Page 71

Advertising
background image

Extended Display Mode —

A display setting that allows you to use a second monitor as an extension of your display. Also referred to as dual display mode.

Extended PC Card —

A PC card that extends beyond the edge of the PC card slot when installed.

 

F

F —

Fahrenheit — A temperature measurement system where 32° is the freezing point and 212° is the boiling point of water. 

FCC —

Federal Communications Commission — A U.S. agency responsible for enforcing communications-related regulations that state how much radiation

computers and other electronic equipment can emit.

Floppy drive —

A disk drive that can read and write to floppy disks.

Folder —

A place to organize and group files on a disk or drive. Files in a folder can be viewed and ordered in various ways, such as alphabetically, by date,

and by size.

Format —

The process that prepares a drive or disk for file storage. When a drive or disk is formatted, the existing information on it is lost.

FSB —

front side bus — The data path and physical interface between the microprocessor and RAM.

ft —

foot — A unit of measurement for length that equals 12 inches.

FTP —

file transfer protocol — A standard Internet protocol used to exchange files between computers connected to the Internet.

 

G

G —

gravity — A measurement of weight and force.

g —

gram — A measurement of mass and weight.

GB —

gigabyte — For memory, a gigabyte is a unit of data that equals 1024 MB (1,073,741,824 bytes); for storage, a gigabyte equals 16 Mb, or 1 billion bytes.

GHz —

gigahertz — A measurement of frequency that equals one thousand million Hz, or one thousand MHz.

Graphics Accelerator —

A type of specialized video processor that boosts graphics performance.

Graphics mode —

A video mode that can be defined as x horizontal pixels by y vertical pixels by z colors. Graphics modes can display an unlimited variety of

shapes and fonts.

GUI —

graphical user interface — Software that interacts with the user by means of menus, windows, and icons. Most applications that operate on the

Microsoft Windows operating systems are GUIs.

 

H

Hard drive —

A drive that reads and writes data on a hard disk. The terms hard drive and hard disk are often used interchangeably.

Heat sink —

A metal plate on some microprocessors that helps dissipate heat.

Hibernate mode —

A power management mode that saves everything in memory to a reserved space on the hard drive and then turns off the computer.

When you restart the computer, the memory information that was saved to the hard drive is automatically restored.

HTML —

hypertext markup language — A set of codes inserted into an Internet web page intended for display on an Internet browser.

HTTP —

hypertext transfer protocol — A protocol for exchanging files between computers connected to the Internet.

Hz —

hertz — A unit of frequency measurement that equals 1 cycle per second. Computers and electronic devices are often measured in kilohertz (kHz),

megahertz (MHz), gigahertz (GHz), or terahertz (THz).

 

I

IC —

Industry Canada — The Canadian regulatory body responsible for regulating emissions from electronic equipment, much as the FCC does in the United

States.

IDE —

integrated device electronics — An interface for mass storage devices in which the controller is integrated into the hard drive or CD drive.

IEEE 1394 —

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. — A high-performance serial bus used to connect IEEE 1394-compatible devices, such as

digital cameras and DVD players, to the computer. Also called FireWire.

I/O —

input/output — An operation or device that enters and extracts data from your computer. Keyboards and printers are I/O devices.

I/O address —

An address in RAM that is associated with a specific device (such as a serial connector, parallel connector, or expansion slot) and allows the

microprocessor to communicate with that device.

IRQ —

interrupt request — An electronic pathway assigned to a specific device so that the device can communicate with the microprocessor. Each device

connection must be assigned an IRQ. For example, the first serial connector in your computer is typically assigned to IRQ4. Although two devices can share the
same IRQ assignment, you cannot operate both devices simultaneously.

Advertising