- Industrie: 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 track in a QuickTime VR movie that contains a set of views of a VR object.
Industry:Software; Computer
A method of digitally encoding sound that represents the range of amplitude values as an unsigned number, with the midpoint of the range representing silence. For example, an 8-bit sound sample stored in offset-binary format would contain sample values ranging from 0 to 255, with a value of 128 specifying silence (no amplitude). Samples in Macintosh sound resources are stored in offset-binary form. Compare twos-complement encoding.
Industry:Software; Computer
Code that defines an object-based interface for a set of procedural interfaces. Some Cocoa objects wrap Carbon interfaces to provide parallel functionality between Cocoa and Carbon applications.
Industry:Software; Computer
Monotonically increasing or decreasing values. In ATSUI, offsets are in Unichars units and are typically used to specify starting and ending points for a string of text.
Industry:Software; Computer
A free collection of digital codecs for multimedia, including Ogg Vorbis for lossy compression of audio at medium-to-high bit rates, and Ogg FLAC for lossless audio.
Industry:Software; Computer
A free, open source, lossless audio codec. Ogg FLAC typically compresses CD audio by 50% with no data loss. FLAC is an acronym for Free Lossless Audio Codec. See also lossless compression.
Industry:Software; Computer
A free, open source, lossy audio codec intended to compete with MP3.
Industry:Software; Computer
Open Host Controller Interface. The register-level standards that are used by most USB and FireWire controller chips.
Industry:Software; Computer
A Carbon event timer that fires only once. See also event timer.
Industry:Software; Computer
A form of shared secret authentication in which both parties have an identical list of pairs of numbers, words, or symbols and each pair is used only once.
Industry:Software; Computer