- Industry: Computer; Software
- Number of terms: 54848
- Number of blossaries: 7
- Company Profile:
Apple Inc., formerly Apple Computer, Inc., is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Cupertino, California, that designs, develops, and sells consumer electronics, computer software and personal computers.
A type of caret that, at the boundary between text of opposite directions, divides into two parts: a high caret and a low caret, each measuring half the line’s height. The two separate half-carets merge into one in unidirectional text.
Industry:Software; Computer
The result of applying a cryptographic hash function to a message or other data. A cryptographically secure message digest cannot be transformed back into the original message and cannot (or is very unlikely to) be created from a different input. Message digests are used to ensure that a message has not been corrupted or altered. For example, they are used for this purpose in digital signatures. The digital signature includes a digest of the original message, and the recipient prepares their own digest of the received message. If the two digests are identical, then the recipient can be confident that the message has not been altered or corrupted.
Industry:Software; Computer
A pane in the Print dialog (available for some printers) that provides the option to print to both sides of a sheet of paper.
Industry:Software; Computer
(1) The length of time, in seconds, it takes for an animation to complete. (2) In QuickTime, time values that are interpreted as spans of time, rather than as points in time.
Industry:Software; Computer
An Apple technology you can use to add interactivity to a DVD when played on a computer. DVD@ccess makes it possible to open a web browser to display HTML files, or open a program to view PDF, PICT, or JPEG files.
Industry:Software; Computer
A modeless window that displays an application’s version and copyright information.
Industry:Software; Computer
An object specifier that has enough information to identify an object or objects uniquely. For an object specifier to an application object to be complete, its outermost container must be the application itself. Compare relative object specifier.
Industry:Software; Computer
The process by which glyphs are rearranged, substituted, deleted, and inserted based upon their properties and contextual states.
Industry:Software; Computer
A notification of a state change in DVD Playback Services during playback. An event is specified with a type identifier and associated data. Client applications can register callback functions to receive events of interest.
Industry:Software; Computer
A specific position, given in coordinates, for the origin of each character or glyph in a line of text. Compare absolute object specifier.
Industry:Software; Computer