General Activities Simulation Program definition
<simulation, library> (GASP) A set of discrete system
simulation subroutines for Fortran.
(2003-09-27)
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General Aerodynamic Simulation Program definition
<simulation> (GASP)
http://www.aerosft.com/Gasp/References/main.php3.
[Summary?]
(2003-09-27)
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gender mender « Gene Amdahl « General Activities Simulation Program « General Aerodynamic Simulation Program » General Electric » General Electric Comprehensive Operating System » General Magic
General Electric definition
<company> (GE) A US company that manufactured computers from
1956 until 1970, when it sold its computer division to
Honeywell and left the computer business. Notable GE
computers were the GE-265, which supported the Dartmouth
Time-sharing System (DTSS), and the GE-645 used for
Multics development.
See also GCOS.
Not to be confused with the General Electric Company (GEC) in
the UK (where FOLDOC's first seeds were sown).
(2002-02-27)
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General Electric Comprehensive Operating System definition
GCOS
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General Magic definition
A software company based in Mountain View, California.
Products released in 1994 after four years in development
include: Telescript - a communications-oriented programming
language; Magic Cap - an OOPS designed for PDAs; and a
new, third generation GUI. Motorola's Envoy, due for
release in the third quarter of 1994, will use Magic Cap as
its OS.
What PostScript did for cross-platform, device-independent
documents, Telescript aims to do for cross-platform,
network-independent messaging. Telescript protects
programmers from many of the complexities of network
protocols.
Competitors for Magic Cap include Microsoft's Windows for
Pens/Winpad, PenPoint, Apple Computer's Newton
Intelligence and GEOS by GeoWorks.
Home.
(1995-02-23)
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General Packet Radio Service definition
<communications> (GPRS) A GSM data transmission technique
that does not set up a continuous channel from a portable
terminal for the transmission and reception of data, but
transmits and receives data in packets. It makes very
efficient use of available radio spectrum, and users pay only
for the volume of data sent and received.
See also: packet radio.
(1999-09-12)
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General Protection Failure definition
(GPF, or General Protection Fault) An addressing error, caught
by the processor's memory protection hardware, that cannot
be attributed to any expected condition such as a page
fault.
(1995-03-28)
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General Protection Fault definition
General Protection Failure
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General Public Licence definition
<spelling> It's spelled "General Public License".
(In the UK, "licence" is a noun and "license" is a verb (like
"advice"/"advise") but in the US both are spelled "license").
(1995-05-12)
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General Public License definition
<legal> (GPL, note US spelling) The licence applied to most
software from the Free Software Foundation and the GNU
project and other authors who choose to use it.
The licences for most software are designed to prevent users
from sharing or changing it. By contrast, the GNU General
Public License is intended to guarantee the freedom to share
and change free software - to make sure the software is free
for all its users. The GPL is designed to make sure that
anyone can distribute copies of free software (and charge for
this service if they wish); that they receive source code or
can get it if they want; that they can change the software or
use pieces of it in new free programs; and that they know they
can do these things. The GPL forbids anyone to deny others
these rights or to ask them to surrender the rights. These
restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for those
who distribute copies of the software or modify it.
See also General Public Virus.
(1994-10-27)
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General Public Virus definition
<software, legal> A pejorative name for some versions of the
GNU project copyleft or General Public License (GPL),
which requires that any tools or application programs
incorporating copylefted code must be source-distributed on
the same terms as GNU code. Thus it is alleged that the
copyleft "infects" software generated with GNU tools, which
may in turn infect other software that reuses any of its code.
Copyright law limits the scope of the GPL to "programs
textually incorporating significant amounts of GNU code" so
GPL is only passed on if actual GNU source is transmitted.
This used to be the case with the Bison parser skeleton
until its licence was fixed.
http://org.gnu.de/manual/bison/html_chapter/bison_2.html#SEC2.
[Jargon File]
(1999-07-14)
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General Purpose Graphic Language definition
["A General Purpose Graphic Language", H.E. Kulsrud, CACM
11(4) (Apr 1968)].
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General Purpose Interface Bus definition
IEEE 488
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General Purpose Language definition
(GPL) An ALGOL 60 variant with user-definable types and
operators.
[Sammet 1969, p. 195].
["The GPL Language", J.V. Garwick et al, TER-05, CDC, Palo
Alto 1969].
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General Purpose Macro-generator definition
<language> (GPM) An early text-processing language similar to
TRAC, implemented on the Atlas 2 by Christopher
Strachey.
["A General Purpose Macrogenerator", C. Strachey, Computer J
8(3):225-241, Oct 1965].
(2006-07-21)
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General Recursion Theorem definition
<mathematics> Cantor's theorem, originally stated for
ordinals, which extends inductive proof to recursive
construction. The proof is by pasting together "attempts"
(partial solutions).
[Better explanation?]
(1995-06-15)
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generate definition
To produce something according to an algorithm or program or
set of rules, or as a (possibly unintended) side effect of
the execution of an algorithm or program.
The opposite of parse.
[Jargon File]
(1995-06-15)
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generation definition
An attempt to classify the degree of sophistication of
programming languages.
See First generation language -- Fifth generation
language.
(1995-06-15)
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General Purpose Macro-generator « General Recursion Theorem « generate « generation » Generic Array Logic » Generic Expert System Tool » generic identifier
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