- Industrie: Computer
- Number of terms: 318110
- Number of blossaries: 26
- Company Profile:
An American multinational software corporation headquartered in Redmond, Washington that develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of products and services related to computing.
A hierarchy in which one or more levels do not contain members in one or more branches of the hierarchy.
Industry:Computer
A type of object that has an e-mail address on a domain in the organization, but the object does not have a mailbox in the domain at which to receive messages. The object appears in the global address list, which allows other people in the organization to easily locate or send a message to that person, but the administrator does not need to manage an unnecessary mailbox. Contacts, users, and even folders can be mail-enabled.
Industry:Computer
The process by which a DNS resolver attempts to resolve a name by appending the DNS search suffix to the name and, if that query fails, by iteratively querying for the name in the next higher level of the domain hierarchy.
Industry:Computer
A database on the Publisher from which data and database objects are marked for replication and propagated to Subscribers.
Industry:Computer
A cursor that cannot be scrolled; rows can be read only in sequence from the first row to the last row.
Industry:Computer
The separating of multiple signals, which were combined into a common physical signal for simultaneous transmission across a single physical channel, back into multiple signals.
Industry:Computer
An authoritative DNS server for a zone that can be used as a point of update for the zone. Only primary masters have the ability to be updated directly to process zone updates, which include adding, removing, or modifying resource records that are stored as zone data. Primary masters are also used as the first sources for replicating the zone to other DNS servers.
Industry:Computer
Part of the integrated Routing and Remote Access service that provides remote networking for telecommuters, mobile workers, and system administrators who monitor and manage servers at multiple branch offices. Users can use Network Connections to dial in to remotely access their networks for services such as file and printer sharing, electronic mail, scheduling, and SQL database access.
Industry:Computer
A hardware-based computer, as opposed to a software-based virtual machine.
Industry:Computer
The value assigned to a financial exchange, such as the cost of an expense or an amount of income.
Industry:Computer