n
(electrical engineering) The off or low bit state.
n
A device used for performing arithmetical calculations; (rare) a table on which loose counters are placed, or (more commonly) an instrument with beads sliding on rods, or counters in grooves, with one row of beads or counters representing units, the next tens, etc.
n
Discovery, interpretation, and communication of meaningful patterns in data.
n
(computing) An error correction technique used in neural networks
n
Any set of machine-readable parallel bars or concentric circles, varying in width, spacing, or height, encoding information according to a symbology
n
The assignment of a barcode to a product and the printing of the barcode on the product
n
(computing) Synonym of binary file; a file consisting of data other than human-readable text.
n
(statistics) A count of the number of things in each element of an array
adj
(computing) In terms of blocks of data.
n
(statistics) The unit in a statistical array (a spreadsheet, for example) where a row and a column intersect.
n
(computing) The length of a chunk of data.
n
(statistics, computer science) A group of data points belonging to the same constraint cluster.
adj
(computing) In terms of chunks; one chunk of data at a time.
n
(software engineering) A type of static structure diagram that describes the structure of a system by showing the system's classes, their attributes, and the relationships between the classes.
n
(computing) The development of a computational theory of design.
n
(computing) A field of study that covers traditional artificial intelligence together with neural networks and fuzzy systems etc.
adj
Functioning upon or through the medium of computers; digital.
adj
(rare) As if created by a computer.
n
(data modeling) A map of concepts, their properties, the relationships between the concepts and the properties of the relationships.
n
(computing) An adage that states that organizations design computer systems that mirror their own communication structure.
n
(collectively) Recorded observations that are usually presented in a structured format.
n
A clear data element definition
n
A type of engineer that is in the data and statistics field.
n
One who carries out data mining.
n
(sciences) An interdisciplinary field about scientific methods, processes and systems to extract knowledge or insights from data.
n
Alternative form of data visualization [The science of the visual representation of data]
n
A sidebox within a book or article, containing illustrative data.
adj
Having a focus on data.
n
One who works with data.
n
Alternative form of data miner [One who carries out data mining.]
n
People with a professional or otherwise profound interest in data, considered as a class; data analysts, statisticians.
n
A very large collection of data
n
Abbreviation of data visualization. [The science of the visual representation of data]
n
(architecture, computing, design) A formal way of documenting a general reusable solution to a design problem in a particular field of expertise.
adj
that has both mechanical and digital parts
adj
Property of representing values as discrete, often binary, numbers rather than a continuous spectrum.
n
(computing) The conversion of data or information from analog to digital or binary.
n
A consensus of replicated, shared, and synchronized digital data geographically spread across multiple locations.
n
Alternative spelling of entity-relationship diagram [(data modeling) A graphical representation of entities and their relationships to each other in a conceptual data model.]
n
(data modeling) A graphical representation of entities and their relationships to each other in a conceptual data model.
n
an abstract conceptual representation of structured data
n
(machine learning) One complete presentation of the training data set to an iterative machine learning algorithm.
n
An entity-relationship diagram; a specialized (usually dynamic) chart that illustrates the relationships between entities in a database, using a specific set of database-specific symbols.
n
(electronics) an gate array designed to be configured by the customer or designer after manufacturing in the field, i.e. after manufacturing.
n
(computing) The breaking up of a data packet when larger than the transmission unit of a network.
n
(computing theory) The problem of finding an adequate collection of axioms making up a viable description of the world for a robot or artificial intelligence.
v
(transitive) To locate (something) using a GPS system.
n
(computing) The situation where two or more inputs to a hash function produce identical output.
n
Any theoretical device capable of carrying out hypercomputation.
adj
Of or pertaining to informatics and information science, the processing of information.
adj
(telecommunications) Between digits (as when dialling a number)
adj
Keeping the number of packets in a network constant.
n
A physical device, typically electronic, which computes a Boolean logical output (0 or 1) from Boolean input or inputs according to the rules of some logical operator.
n
(computing theory) A finite-state machine whose output values are determined by both its current state and its current inputs.
n
Alternative spelling of metatool [(behavioural sciences) A tool that is used to make or modify another tool.]
n
(databases) Synonym of metadatabase
n
One piece of metadata; a piece of information describing a piece of data.
n
A framework that describes other frameworks.
n
(computing) A kind of pipeline that exploits nested parallelism.
n
(behavioural sciences) A tool that is used to make or modify another tool.
n
Alternative spelling of microinteraction [(graphical user interface) Any very small-scale interaction between a user and the system they are using.]
n
(computing) A person who designs a microarchitecture.
n
Alternative letter-case form of microserf [(originally) An individual working for Microsoft in a low-level position.]
n
The employment of minibatches
n
A simplified representation used to explain the workings of a real world system or event.
n
(computing) An empirical observation that the density of transistors on a chip doubles every two years.
n
Abbreviation of microtransaction. [(economics) A transaction for a very small amount of money (a micropayment)]
adj
(computing) Involving or relating to several software applications.
adj
Describing a telecommunications signal that is split into fragments, each of which is transmitted over separate carriers before being recombined
n
(computing) a delegate that points to several methods
n
(programming) A data structure that maps a single key to multiple values.
v
(computing) To combine several signals into one.
n
The conversion of a signal to multiplex form
adj
Involving multiple computer workstations.
n
(computing) A program, algorithm, or hardware with a focus on numerical calculation.
n
A description, usually graphical, showing the major participants or components in a system and their interrelationships.
n
Constraints or assessments applied to transactional or warehoused data to assure data quality.
n
(computing theory) In machine learning and natural language processing, a suite of algorithms to determine the thematic structure of a collection of documents by modelling correlations between topics in addition to the word correlations that constitute topics.
n
(computing) The use of parallel methods in hardware or software, so that several tasks can be performed at the same time.
n
(computing) The number of text characters in a path (file or resource specifier).
n
(programming) A format string in the COBOL programming language.
n
An esoteric programming language whose programs are bitmaps that look like abstract art.
n
(computing) Alternative letter-case form of PNG; Portable Network Graphics, an open protocol for digital images.
n
(computing) An approximation of graphics achieved through the use of text characters.
n
(computing theory) An entity that resembles, but is not in fact, a state in a state machine or similar.
n
The collection and analysis of machine-sensed environmental data pertaining to human social behavior, with the goal of identifying predictable patterns of behavior.
v
(transitive, computer graphics) To transform (a model) into a display on the screen or other media.
n
A framework for computation derived from recurrent neural network theory, mapping input signals into higher-dimensional computational spaces through the dynamics of a fixed, non-linear system called a reservoir.
n
(computing) The length of a sequence of repeated characters in a string
n
(computing) A machine-readable two-dimensional barcode used primarily to code website addresses.
n
(geography, computing) A computer file in the Shapefile format, used in geographic information systems.
n
(computing) A kind of data filter used in data visualization.
n
(computing) The stable condition of a processor during a particular clock cycle.
n
(UK, education) Division of classes into academic streams.
n
(computing) Several pieces of data treated as a unit.
n
A subsidiary frame (chunk of data).
n
(electronics) Any part of a signal that is formed by a combination from several sources
n
Complex and advanced computation of the kind performed by supercomputers.
n
(computing) An outer scope that contains one or more subscopes.
n
(machine learning) A supervised learning model with associated algorithms that analyse data used for classification and regression analysis.
n
A collection of arithmetic calculations arranged in a table, such as multiplications in a multiplication table.
adj
(art) Produced through a combination of traditional and computer-based techniques.
n
(computing theory) A state machine that generates output based on a given input.
n
(metadata) The set of allowed values for a data element.
n
(computing) A visual representation of data.
n
A sequential software development process in which development is seen as flowing steadily downwards (like a waterfall) through the phases of requirements analysis, design, implementation, testing, integration, and maintenance
n
(computing) A fixed-size group of bits handled as a unit by a machine and which can be stored in or retrieved from a typical register (so that it has the same size as such a register).
n
(electronics) An array of rows of memory cells in random access memory, used with the bitline to generate the address of each cell.
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