IT CertificationsComprehensive Study Set

Comptia A+ Material

763 questions across 0 topics. Use the find bar or section chips to jump to what you need.

Community-sourced. Answers may be wrong or out of date. Always verify with your official training portal before submitting. Not affiliated with any branch, agency, or vendor. Details.
QUESTION 1

32-bit

ANSWER

In reference to the Windows operating systems, one that can utilize up to 4 GB of address space.

QUESTION 2

64-bit

ANSWER

In reference to the Windows operating systems, one that can utilize more than 4 GB of address space. Depending on the version, 64-bit Windows can address a maximum of from 8 to 192 GB.

QUESTION 3

802.11a

ANSWER

A wireless network standard that uses the 5 GHz band.

QUESTION 4

802.11b

ANSWER

A wireless network standard that uses the 2.4 GHz band at a speed of up to 10 Mbps.

QUESTION 5

802.11g

ANSWER

A wireless network standard that uses the 2.4 GHz band at a speed of up to 54 Mbps. It is downward-compatible with 802.11b.

QUESTION 6

802.11n

ANSWER

A wireless network standard that defines speeds of up to 600 Mbps. It is downward-compatible with 802.11a, 802.11b, and 802.11g.

QUESTION 7

8-bit high color

ANSWER

Describes the VGA mode color setting that, although it can produce around 16 million different colors, can only display up to 256 different colors at a time.

QUESTION 8

AC adapter

ANSWER

A type of power supply that converts AC power to voltages needed for a device. AC adapters are generally used for portable PC systems and other devices.

QUESTION 9

accelerated graphics port

ANSWER

A local bus designed for video only, it provides a direct link between the processor and the video card, giving the video card direct access to main memory.

QUESTION 10

access control

ANSWER

Managing access to resources. _______ to computers and network resources involves authentication and authorization.

QUESTION 11

access control entry

ANSWER

In an access control list, a record containing just one user or group account name and the permissions assigned to that account.

QUESTION 12

access control list

ANSWER

A table on each file and folder in the NTFS file system that contains one or more access control entries.

QUESTION 13

accessory bay

ANSWER

In a laptop, a compartment that holds a single media device that is switchable with another.

QUESTION 14

ACT

ANSWER

The "activity" status light on a NIC that indicates data is being transmitted.

QUESTION 15

activation

ANSWER

A method used by several software manufacturers to combat software piracy.

QUESTION 16

active communication

ANSWER

A set of behaviors including active listening and active speaking that shows you are fully engaged in the conversation and encourages the other person to also communicate in a positive manner.

QUESTION 17

active listening

ANSWER

A set of skills, behaviors, and attitudes to use when listening to another person.

QUESTION 18

active matrix display

ANSWER

An LCD technology based on thin-film transistor (TFT) technology. It has a transistor at every pixel, which enables much quicker display changes

QUESTION 19

active partition

ANSWER

A primary partition that is marked for use by the system during startup. Windows operating systems can only be booted from this

QUESTION 20

active speaking

ANSWER

The appropriate responses that you make during a conversation.

QUESTION 21

ad hoc mode

ANSWER

In a Wi-Fi network, the networking mode that allows peer-to-peer communications without the use of a centralized wireless hub, called a wireless access point (WAP).

QUESTION 22

adapter card

ANSWER

A printed circuit card that you add to the motherboard to enhance functionality. Also called an expansion card. Video adapters and network interface cards (NICs) are examples of this

QUESTION 23

address bus

ANSWER

A group of wires used to identify addresses in main system memory in a computer. The number of wires in an address bus is called the width of the bus and determines the number of unique memory locations that can be addressed using binary math with the two raised to the power of the number of wires in the bus. A 32-bit bus can address up to 4 GB of memory, whereas a 36-bit address bus can address up to 64 GB of memory.

QUESTION 24

Address Resolution Protocol

ANSWER

A protocol used to resolve an IP address to a MAC address.

QUESTION 25

Advanced Communications Riser

ANSWER

A riser card standard that AMD, 3Com, and others introduced in 2000 to supersede AMR. It uses one PCI slot, provides accelerated audio and modem functions as well as networking, and supports multiple Ethernet NICs.

QUESTION 26

Advanced Configuration and Power Interface

ANSWER

A power management standard that includes all the power states of APM, plus two more. It also supports soft power.

QUESTION 27

Advanced Micro Devices

ANSWER

AMD manufactures CPUs and other products, and its chief rival is Intel Corporation.

QUESTION 28

Advanced Power Management

ANSWER

A power management standard, introduced by Intel in 1992, that defines four power-usage operating levels.

QUESTION 29

Advanced Technology

ANSWER

A type of motherboard used in older PC systems; also refers to the 1984 IBM PC AT model.

QUESTION 30

Advanced Technology Attachment

ANSWER

The former name of the Parallel AT Attachment (PATA) interface standard.

QUESTION 31

Advanced Technology eXtended

ANSWER

A type of motherboard and its variants most commonly used in recent PC systems.

QUESTION 32

adware

ANSWER

Software installed on a computer without permission that collects information about a user in order to display targeted advertisements, in the form of either inline banners or pop-ups. Inline banners are advertisements that run within the context of the current page, taking up screen real estate.

QUESTION 33

alternating current

ANSWER

The delivery of electricity (as from a wall outlet) in which the flow of electrons reverses periodically and has alternating positive and negative values.

QUESTION 34

amperes (amps)

ANSWER

A measurement of the volume of electrons, also called current. It is calculated with the formula amps = watts / volts.

QUESTION 35

analog LCD display

ANSWER

An LCD display that uses a DB-15 connector, which means that it accepts analog signals that it converts to digital.

QUESTION 36

analog modem

ANSWER

A modulator/demodulator device that allows computers to communicate with one another over existing phone lines.

QUESTION 37

answer file

ANSWER

A file used during an unattended installation of Windows. It provides a script of responses to the questions Setup asks so the user does not have to answer them manually.

QUESTION 38

antistatic mat

ANSWER

A mat that provides a path to ground for a static charge and is designed for the desktop or floor of a workspace. One placed on the workbench reduces the risk of electrostatic discharge for components placed on it, while one placed on the floor provides the same protection for anyone standing on the mat.

QUESTION 39

antistatic wrist strap

ANSWER

A strap designed to discharge static electricity from your body. One end attaches to the wrist, whereas the other end attaches to a grounded object.

QUESTION 40

archive attribute

ANSWER

A file attribute set by the OS when a file is created or modified. Backup software often removes this attribute when backing up a file in order to mark it as a backed-up file.

QUESTION 41

arithmetic logic unit

ANSWER

A component of a CPU that is responsible for all logical and mathematical operations in the system.

QUESTION 42

aspect ratio

ANSWER

The proportion between an image's width and height. Traditional CRT monitors have an aspect ratio of 4:3. Widescreen displays have an aspect ratio of 16:9.

QUESTION 43

asymmetrical digital subscriber line

ANSWER

A type of DSL service in which the download speed is higher than the upload speed.

QUESTION 44

asynchronous transfer mode

ANSWER

A type of switched network used by phone companies.

QUESTION 45

ATA Packet Interface

ANSWER

The protocol for connecting optical drives and tape drives to an ATA channel.

QUESTION 46

attended installation

ANSWER

An installation of Windows that is not automated, where the user is required to pay attention throughout the entire process to provide information and to respond to messages. Also called a manual installation.

QUESTION 47

ATV12V

ANSWER

A power supply standard that has both the 20-pin connector for the motherboard and a 4-pin 12 V connector.

QUESTION 48

ATX power supply

ANSWER

A power supply form factor that pairs with an ATX motherboard and case.

QUESTION 49

audio modem riser

ANSWER

A small expansion card introduced in the late 1990s that plugs into a special slot on a motherboard and uses the CPU to perform modem functions and sound functions. It is not plug and play compatible.

QUESTION 50

Audit Policy

ANSWER

In Windows, one or more settings found in the Local Security Settings console.

QUESTION 51

authentication

ANSWER

A validation of a user account and password that occurs before the security components of Windows will give the user access to the computer.

QUESTION 52

authentication factor

ANSWER

Things used for authentication, such as something you know, something you have, or something you are. Authentication involves one or more of these factors and can, therefore, be one-factor, two-factor, or three-factor authentication.

QUESTION 53

authorization

ANSWER

The process that authenticates a user and verifies the user account's level of access to a resource.

QUESTION 54

ASR

ANSWER

An option available in the Windows XP Backup program for recovering from damage that prevents the operating system from starting. It replaced the Emergency Repair Disk (ERD) process in Windows 2000.

QUESTION 55

Automated System Recovery

ANSWER

In Windows XP, this replaces the Emergency Repair process of Windows NT and Windows 2000. It is available from the Windows Backup program (NTBACKUP.EXE).

QUESTION 56

Automatic Private IP Address

ANSWER

An address that a DHCP client will assign to itself after requesting an address and failing to receive one from a DHCP server. The address it will assign is in the 169.254 /16 network, which is the range of addresses from 169.254.0.1 to 169.254.255.254.

QUESTION 57

auto-switching power supply

ANSWER

A power supply that detects the incoming voltage and switches to accept either 120 or 240 VAC.

QUESTION 58

back door

ANSWER

Program code that provides a way for someone to gain access to a computer while bypassing security. Only a person who knows how it works can use it, but once in, that individual has the same access as the host program to all the internal operating system code.

QUESTION 59

background process

ANSWER

A process that runs "behind the scenes" with a low priority, does not require input, and rarely creates output.

QUESTION 60

backup media

ANSWER

Any writable mass storage device, removable or fixed in place.

QUESTION 61

Balanced Technology eXtended

ANSWER

A motherboard form factor introduced in 2003 by Intel as the successor to ATX.

QUESTION 62

bandwidth

ANSWER

The amount of data that can travel over a network at a given time.

QUESTION 63

bar code reader

ANSWER

A specialized type of scanner that reads bar codes, which are patterns of bars of varying widths printed on labels or directly on items. The bar pattern is converted into a numeric code that is transmitted to a computer as data.

QUESTION 64

basic disk

ANSWER

A disk that uses basic storage, which means that it uses the partition table in the master boot record (MBR) to define disk partitions.

QUESTION 65

BIOS

ANSWER

A type of computer firmware that is responsible for informing the CPU of installed devices and how to communicate with them.

QUESTION 66

Basic Service Set

ANSWER

The wireless nodes (including the WAP) communicating together in infrastructure mode.

QUESTION 67

basic storage

ANSWER

A storage type in Windows that uses the partition table in the master boot record (MBR) to define disk partitions.

QUESTION 68

BDD Workbench

ANSWER

A tool used to create and manage a distribution share and various installation images.

QUESTION 69

beam-on-blade connector

ANSWER

The type of connector used in the ExpressCard interface.

QUESTION 70

bidirectional mode

ANSWER

A parallel port mode in which the signals can be transmitted in both directions between the PC and parallel devices connected to the computer.

QUESTION 71

biometric

ANSWER

A measurement of a body part, such as a fingerprint or retina scan.

QUESTION 72

biometric device

ANSWER

A device that uses a measurement of a body part, such as a fingerprint or retina scan.

QUESTION 73

biometric logon

ANSWER

The use of a biometric for authentication.

QUESTION 74

BIOS settings

ANSWER

The BIOS configuration settings, also called system settings, accessed via a special BIOS-based menu during system startup.

QUESTION 75

bit width

ANSWER

In reference to a memory module, how much information the processor can access from or write to memory in a single cycle.

QUESTION 76

BitLocker drive encryption

ANSWER

An encryption technology introduced in Windows Vista Enterprise and Ultimate editions, Windows Server 2008, and also in Windows 7 Ultimate and Enterprise editions. It encrypts the entire boot volume.

QUESTION 77

bluesnarfing

ANSWER

The act of covertly obtaining information broadcast from wireless devices using the Bluetooth standard.

QUESTION 78

Bluetooth

ANSWER

A wireless standard for using radio waves to communicate between devices

QUESTION 79

Blu-ray disc

ANSWER

The high-definition optical disc formatting standard developed by the __ Association whose members include Sony, 20th Century Fox, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, and many other industry leaders.

QUESTION 80

BNC

ANSWER

A connector used to attach coaxial cables to computers and network equipment.

QUESTION 81

boot record

ANSWER

The first physical sector on a floppy disk or the first sector on a hard drive partition. It contains information about the OS. The __ on a primary active partition is used to start the operating system.

QUESTION 82

boot sequence

ANSWER

The order in which the BIOS will search devices for an operating system to start.

QUESTION 83

bridge

ANSWER

A network connection device that passes traffic between two networks, using the physical address (MAC address) of the destination device.

QUESTION 84

broadband WAN

ANSWER

A wide area network (WAN) connection that allows a large amount of data to be transmitted. Broadband WANs includes cellular, ISDN, DSL, cable, T-carrier, satellite, and fiber.

QUESTION 85

Bubble Jet

ANSWER

A popular inkjet printer developed by Canon.

QUESTION 86

bus

ANSWER

In a computer, pathways that power, data, and control signals travel from one component to another within the system.

QUESTION 87

C

ANSWER

Used to represent the chrominance signal in S-Video.

QUESTION 88

cable select

ANSWER

An EIDE drive setting that has the system select the drive's role (master or slave) based on the drive's position on the cable. If the drive is on the end of the cable, it is the master drive, and if it is in the middle of the cable, it is the slave drive.

QUESTION 89

cable tester

ANSWER

A tool for testing if a cable can connect properly end-to-end and to determine if a cable has a short. These tools are available for a variety of cable types.

QUESTION 90

cache controller

ANSWER

A CPU component that manages the CPU cache.

QUESTION 91

capacity

ANSWER

In power supplies, the amount of wattage the power supply can handle.

QUESTION 92

capture card

ANSWER

A category of adapter card that accepts and records video signals to a PC's hard drive.

QUESTION 93

card services

ANSWER

A service on a laptop that configures a card after socket services has recognized it.

QUESTION 94

CardBus

ANSWER

The PCMCIA standard that succeeds the PC Card.

QUESTION 95

case

ANSWER

The box that houses the main computer system.

QUESTION 96

case fan

ANSWER

A cooling fan mounted directly on the case, as opposed to a power supply fan, which is inside the power supply.

QUESTION 97

cathode ray tube (CRT) monitor

ANSWER

A display device that contains a cathode ray tube and uses an electron gun to activate phosphors behind the screen at the front of the tub.

QUESTION 98

CD-R (CD-Record)

ANSWER

A drive that can write once to a special CD-R disc.

QUESTION 99

CD-ROM drive

ANSWER

A drive on a computer that can play music CDs and read data CDs, but cannot write to CDs.

QUESTION 100

CD-RW

ANSWER

A drive that can write either to CD-R discs or to specially designed CD-RW discs. In the case of the CD-RW discs, the drive can write more than once to the same portion of disc, overwriting old data.

QUESTION 101

cellular WAN

ANSWER

Data communications over the cellular telecommunications networks.

QUESTION 102

central processing unit

ANSWER

The primary control device for a computer system. It is simply a chip containing a set of components that manages all the activities. Also called a processor.

QUESTION 103

Centronics

ANSWER

A 36-pin connector mounted to a device's parallel interface.

QUESTION 104

channel service unit

ANSWER

A device required at both ends of a T-carrier system connection.

QUESTION 105

charging

ANSWER

In the laser printing process, the stage in which the printer's high-voltage power supply (HVPS) conducts electricity to the primary corona wire so it can pass the voltage on to the printer's electro-photosensitive drum.

QUESTION 106

chipset

ANSWER

One or more chips designed to work closely with the CPU. Two parts of this chipset are the Northbridge and the Southbridge.

QUESTION 107

chrominance

ANSWER

The signal in a television transmission that contains the color of the image.

QUESTION 108

cleaning

ANSWER

In the laser printing process, the stage in which the image is removed from the photosensitive drum so it can accept the next image.

QUESTION 109

cleaning blade

ANSWER

In the laser printing process, a blade that removes residual toner from the drum.

QUESTION 110

client/server-based network

ANSWER

A network in which dedicated computers called servers store data and provide print services or other capabilities to computers running the appropriate client service or services.

QUESTION 111

clock speed

ANSWER

In a CPU, the speed at which it can potentially execute instructions, measured in millions of cycles per second—megahertz (MHz)—or billions of cycles per second—gigahertz (GHz).

QUESTION 112

cluster

ANSWER

The minimum disk space that a file can use, allocated in the file system.

QUESTION 113

CMOS settings

ANSWER

A misnomer, referring to the BIOS settings that are stored in a CMOS chip.

QUESTION 114

coaxial cable

ANSWER

Cabling that contains a single copper wire surrounded by several layers of insulating plastic and a woven wire sheath that provides protection.

QUESTION 115

Code Division Multiple Access

ANSWER

The cellular network standards used by Verizon and Sprint-Nextel.

QUESTION 116

code signing

ANSWER

A practice begun in Windows 2000 in which all of the operating system code is digitally signed to show that it has not been tampered with.

QUESTION 117

color depth

ANSWER

The number of colors used by a display.

QUESTION 118

Color Quality

ANSWER

A Windows display setting that allows you to adjust the number of colors, or color depth, used by the display.

QUESTION 119

communication network riser

ANSWER

A riser card that is similar to audio modem riser (AMR) except that it is plug and play-compatible and supports LANs in addition to audio, modem, and sound.

QUESTION 120

compact disc

ANSWER

An optical disc created and read by a mechanism using a laser. (2)

QUESTION 121

Compact Disc File System

ANSWER

A file system used by operating systems for organizing, reading, and writing optical discs.

QUESTION 122

CD-ROM

ANSWER

Laser discs sold at retail stores that contain music (audio CDs) or software (data CDs).

QUESTION 123

CompactFlash

ANSWER

A type of solid-state storage that is commonly used in a variety of devices, such as digital cameras.

QUESTION 124

CMOS

ANSWER

A chip that retains system settings such as the time, keyboard settings, and boot sequence.

QUESTION 125

component video

ANSWER

A video signaling method in which analog video information is transmitted as two or more discrete signals. Two general types are RGB Video and S-Video.

QUESTION 126

composite video

ANSWER

The traditional transmission system for television video signals, which combines the color and brightness information with the synchronization data into one signal. The TV circuitry then separates the two signals from the composite signal.

QUESTION 127

computer platform

ANSWER

The hardware architecture, including the CPU, BIOS, and chipset.

QUESTION 128

COMx

ANSWER

A generic reference to a PC's serial communications port, in which the x represents the port number.

QUESTION 129

connector

ANSWER

The plug at the end of a cable or the port or connection point on a computer or device.

QUESTION 130

continuity RIMM

ANSWER

A special terminating stick that must be inserted into the open RIMM sockets.

QUESTION 131

contrast ratio

ANSWER

The difference in value between a display's brightest white and darkest black. Modern LCD displays have a contrast ratio of 500:1 or greater.

QUESTION 132

Control Panel

ANSWER

A Windows folder that contains numerous applets you can use to adjust the configuration of many different aspects of the OS. (8)

QUESTION 133

control unit

ANSWER

In a CPU, the component that is primarily responsible for directing all the activities of the computer and the interactions of its components.

QUESTION 134

cookies

ANSWER

Small text files a Web browser saves on the local hard drive at the request of a Website.

QUESTION 135

copy

ANSWER

A file operation in which the file or folder remains in the source location, and a duplicate is created in the target (destination) location

QUESTION 136

CPU fan

ANSWER

A cooling fan located on a CPU.

QUESTION 137

CrossFire

ANSWER

A multi-GPU solution developed by ATI.

QUESTION 138

customer premises equipment

ANSWER

A T-1 multiplexer or a special LAN bridge that connects to the telephone company's channel service unit (CSU), which encodes data for transmission over a T-carrier circuit.

QUESTION 139

data migration

ANSWER

The moving of data from one storage device to another.

QUESTION 140

datagram

ANSWER

The chunks into which the TCP protocol packages data. In addition to the data, each datagram contains information, stored in a header, which is used by the TCP protocol on the receiving end to reassemble the chunks of data into the original message.

QUESTION 141

daughter card

ANSWER

A type of riser card that connects directly into a motherboard and adds no additional functionality of its own, but extends the expansion bus and allows expansion cards to be added in a different physical orientation.

QUESTION 142

DB-25

ANSWER

A 25-pin D-shell connector.

QUESTION 143

DB-9

ANSWER

A 9-pin D-shell connector.

QUESTION 144

DC Controller

ANSWER

A device found in laptops that monitors and regulates power usage. The features vary by manufacturer, but typically, they provide short-circuit protection, give "low battery" warnings, and can be configured to shut down the computer automatically when the power is low.

QUESTION 145

DDR2 SDRAM

ANSWER

A RAM standard that replaces the original DDR standard. Using far less power than DDR1, a stick of DDR2 SDRAM has 240 pins.

QUESTION 146

DDR3 SDRAM

ANSWER

A RAM standard that replaces the original DDR2 standard and requires far less power, while providing almost twice the bandwidth. A stick of ___ has 240 pins, but is keyed so it will not fit into a socket designed for DDR2. DDR3 SO-DIMMs have 204 pins.

QUESTION 147

dead pixel

ANSWER

A dark spot on an LCD screen caused when a transistor is permanently off.

QUESTION 148

Debugging Mode

ANSWER

A Windows Advanced Options menu choice used to send debugging information about the Windows startup over a serial cable to another computer running a special program called a debugger.

QUESTION 149

default gateway

ANSWER

In an IP configuration, the address of the local router that acts as a gateway from the local network to other IP networks.

QUESTION 150

degaussing

ANSWER

The process of using an oscillating magnetic field to reduce and randomize the magnetic field that builds up on the shadow mask of a CRT monitor.

QUESTION 151

demilitarized zone

ANSWER

In computer networking, a network located between a private network and the Internet with a firewall on both sides.

QUESTION 152

DoS attack

ANSWER

This attack occurs when someone sends a large number of requests to a server, overwhelming the server so it stops functioning on the network.

QUESTION 153

developing

ANSWER

In the laser printing process, this is the step in which the cover on the printer's toner cartridge is opened and the toner particles are attracted to the relatively less negatively charged areas of the drum.

QUESTION 154

device driver

ANSWER

Program code that allows an operating system to control the use of a physical device.

QUESTION 155

Device Manager

ANSWER

A Windows GUI utility that allows an administrator to view the status of devices and install, remove, and update device drivers

QUESTION 156

DHCP Server

ANSWER

A server running the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) service. This server allocates IP addresses to DHCP client computers.

QUESTION 157

dialer

ANSWER

A program that causes a modem to dial phone numbers surreptitiously.

QUESTION 158

dial-up

ANSWER

A WAN connection that uses an analog modem rather than a network card and uses standard phone cables rather than network cables.

QUESTION 159

digital LCD display

ANSWER

An LCD display that accepts a digital signal. Early LCD displays accepted an analog signal and converted it to digital internally.

QUESTION 160

Digital Light Processing

ANSWER

An optical semiconductor used in small projectors and in rear-projection televisions.

QUESTION 161

digital linear tape

ANSWER

A technology developed in the 1980s for storing data. Variations of this format are in use today.

QUESTION 162

digital signature

ANSWER

Encrypted data placed in a file to guard against tampering.

QUESTION 163

DSL

ANSWER

A WAN connection that uses existing copper telephone wire for the communication circuit. To accomplish this, the modem splits the existing phone line into two bands; voice transmission uses the frequencies below 4000 Hz, whereas data transmission uses everything else.

QUESTION 164

digital versatile disc

ANSWER

A disc designed to store all types of data usable by a computer. This term also refers to the drives that read and write to these discs. There are various types of DVD drives and media.

QUESTION 165

digital video discs

ANSWER

The original digital discs created in 1995 for storing video. (1)

QUESTION 166

digital video interface

ANSWER

It has several modes, including one that offers downward compatibility with analog displays. It requires a special connector, which comes in several variations to support it

QUESTION 167

digital video recorder

ANSWER

A device that records video content to disk.

QUESTION 168

digitizing tablet

ANSWER

An input device that uses a stylus. Available as an external device, it uses touch screen technology and is usually at least the size of a sheet of paper. Also called a digitizer.

QUESTION 169

DIN connector

ANSWER

A round connector that gets its name from Deutsche Industrie Norm, a German standards organization. Normally a round connector with a circular or semicircle of pins.

QUESTION 170

DIP switch

ANSWER

Dual inline package. A very tiny slide that indicates two states. Motherboard and other circuit cards often have one or more groupings of ____ for configuring options.

QUESTION 171

direct current

ANSWER

The type of electrical current delivered by a battery in which the electrons flow in only one direction.

QUESTION 172

direct memory access channel

ANSWER

A system resource that certain devices, such as sound cards and hard drives, can use to move data between the device and system RAM without involving the processor.

QUESTION 173

direct thermal printer

ANSWER

A type of thermal printer in which a heated print head burns dots into the surface of heat-sensitive paper.

QUESTION 174

Directory Services Restore Mode

ANSWER

In Windows, an Advanced Option that is only available in Windows Servers in the role of domain controllers, although it appears on the menu in non-domain controllers.

QUESTION 175

Disable Automatic Restart

ANSWER

An Advanced Options choice that will temporarily disable the Automatically Restart option on the Advanced page of System Properties.

QUESTION 176

discretion

ANSWER

Not revealing information about someone that would be harmful to or embarrass him or her.

QUESTION 177

display

ANSWER

A screen device for video output. Also called a monitor.

QUESTION 178

Display Brightness Key

ANSWER

A key on a laptop that, when pressed along with the FN key, changes the laptop display brightness at the hardware level. On some laptops, when this key combination is pressed, a small brightness control panel will display on the screen. Use the up (↑) or right (→) arrow key to increase the brightness, and use the left (←) or down (↓) arrow key to decrease the brightness.

QUESTION 179

Display Mode Key

ANSWER

A key on a laptop that is pressed along with the FN key to change display modes so the output will be only to the laptop's display, only to an external display, or simultaneously to both displays. The DISPLAY MODE key is normally a function key, such as F7, that displays a display symbol.

QUESTION 180

display power-management signaling

ANSWER

A VESA standard for power management in display devices.

QUESTION 181

display resolution

ANSWER

The displayable number of pixels, expressed as x and y numbers, such as 1024 × 768, 1152 × 864, and 1280 × 1024.

QUESTION 182

DisplayPort

ANSWER

A digital display interface standard developed by the Video Electronics Standards Association that supports both video and audio signals, contains HDCP copy protection, and is unique because it is royalty-free to manufacturers.

QUESTION 183

distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack

ANSWER

This attack occurs when a massive number (up to hundreds of thousands) of computers send DoS attacks to a server, making it unavailable.

QUESTION 184

Distributed File System

ANSWER

A service implemented on Windows Servers that hides the complexity of the network from end users in that it makes files that are distributed across multiple servers appear as if they are in one place.

QUESTION 185

distribution server

ANSWER

A server containing source files for installing software onto client computers. The shared folder containing these files is a software distribution point.

QUESTION 186

distribution share

ANSWER

A shared folder on a distribution server containing the source files for a remote installation.

QUESTION 187

DMA controller

ANSWER

A specialized chip that controls DMA channels.

QUESTION 188

DNS Server

ANSWER

A server that manages DNS names.

QUESTION 189

docking station

ANSWER

A more advanced and more expensive alternative to a port replicator. In addition to the ports normally found on a port replicator, it may include full-size expansion slots and drives.

QUESTION 190

domain

ANSWER

In a Microsoft Windows network, an administrative organization with a centralized security accounts database maintained on one or more special servers called domain controllers. This centralized database contains accounts for users, groups, and computers participating in the domain, and it is used to authenticate a user for access to any resource in the domain.

QUESTION 191

DNS

ANSWER

The Internet service that manages access to Internet domain names and the naming system it uses for computers and resources connected to the Internet or in a private network.

QUESTION 192

dot matrix printer

ANSWER

A type of printer that uses a matrix of pins striking paper through an ink ribbon to create dots on the paper, forming alphanumeric characters and graphic images.

QUESTION 193

dotted decimal notation

ANSWER

The format in which IP addresses are usually shown, with decimal numbers separated by "dots" as in 192.168.100.2.

QUESTION 194

double-data rate SDRAM

ANSWER

RAM that doubles the rate of speed at which a standard SDRAM can process data

QUESTION 195

double-sided DVD

ANSWER

A DVD of any type that can store data on both sides of the disc.

QUESTION 196

drive image

ANSWER

An exact duplicate of an entire hard drive's contents, including the OS and all installed software.

QUESTION 197

drive lock password

ANSWER

A password that locks your hard drive and is often stored in a TPM chip

QUESTION 198

drive path

ANSWER

When a mount point exists between a partition or volume to a folder on another volume, the drive path is the path (including a drive letter) to that partition or volume.

QUESTION 199

drive-by download

ANSWER

A program downloaded to a computer without the user's consent. The user unwittingly initiates the download by some simple act, such as browsing to a Website or opening an e-mail message written in HTML. Or a user may initiate a drive-by download by installing an application.

QUESTION 200

driver signing

ANSWER

The practice of applying a digital signature to device driver code.

QUESTION 201

DIMM

ANSWER

A memory module (stick) that installs into matching DIMM sockets found on many motherboards. The word "dual" refers to the separate pins or connections on both sides of the module and socket.

QUESTION 202

dual layer

ANSWER

Pertaining to a DVD drive and disc that can store data in two pitted layers on each data side, with each layer having a different reflectivity index.

QUESTION 203

dual-core CPU

ANSWER

A CPU containing two CPU cores.

QUESTION 204

DVD+R

ANSWER

Digital versatile disc (DVD) discs that can be written to, but data cannot be overwritten. This standard is newer than DVD-R. This term also refers to the drives that can write to these discs.

QUESTION 205

DVD+RW

ANSWER

Digital versatile disc (DVD) discs that can be rewritten to, and data can also be overwritten. This standard is newer than DVD-RW. This term also refers to the drives that can write to these discs.

QUESTION 206

DVD-10

ANSWER

A double-sided, single-layer digital versatile disc (DVD) that stores 9.4 GB of data, or over four hours of video.

QUESTION 207

DVD-18

ANSWER

A double-sided, double-layer digital versatile disc (DVD) that stores 17.08 GB of data, or over eight hours of video.

QUESTION 208

DVD-5

ANSWER

A single-sided, single-layer digital versatile disc (DVD) that stores 4.7 GB of data, or over two hours of video.

QUESTION 209

DVD-9

ANSWER

A single-sided, double-layer digital versatile disc (DVD) that stores 8.54 GB of data, or over four hours of video.

QUESTION 210

DVD-Data discs

ANSWER

A blanket term used for DVD discs regardless of the type of data they contain.

QUESTION 211

DVD-RAM

ANSWER

The digital versatile disc (DVD) encoding format used for data storage.

QUESTION 212

DVD-ROM

ANSWER

The read-only DVD discs sold at retail stores, containing video or software and having a maximum capacity of 15.9 GB of data. This term also applies to the drives that can only read DVDs.

QUESTION 213

DVD-ROM drive

ANSWER

A DVD drive that cannot write to but can read DVD discs.

QUESTION 214

DVD-Video

ANSWER

The original digital versatile disc (DVD) encoding format used for movies sold at retail.

QUESTION 215

DVI-A

ANSWER

A DVI mode that supports downward compatibility with analog displays.

QUESTION 216

DVI-D

ANSWER

A DVI mode that supports digital video signals and is partially compatible with HDMI. See also digital video interface and High-Definition Multimedia Interface.

QUESTION 217

DVI-I

ANSWER

A DVI mode that supports both analog and digital video signals.

QUESTION 218

DXDIAG

ANSWER

Windows run-line utility for testing the DirectX support. Launch this program when experiencing video problems and/or audio problems when running DirectX applications.

QUESTION 219

dynamic disk

ANSWER

A disk type introduced with Windows 2000 that contains space allocated in volumes without the limits imposed on basic disks. On a dynamic disk, the number of volumes are unlimited, and a volume can extend to include available space on any hard disk in the computer.

QUESTION 220

Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)

ANSWER

The protocol used by DHCP servers and clients. A DHCP server allocates IP addresses within the scope of addresses configured on the server by an administrator. DHCP clients request IP addresses and other IP configuration settings from DHCP Servers.

QUESTION 221

DRAM

ANSWER

Memory chips that provide much slower access than SRAM chips but that can store several megabytes of data on a single chip (or hundreds of megabytes, or even gigabytes, when they are packaged together on a "stick").

QUESTION 222

dynamic storage

ANSWER

A method for allocating disk space on hard disks in which configuration information for each dynamic disk is located on the disk space beyond the first physical sector. This configuration information is stored outside of any volume on the hard disk.

QUESTION 223

edition

ANSWER

A subpackaging of a Windows revision that contains the core OS plus a special set of features that is offered as a separate product targeted to a certain type of end user.

QUESTION 224

EEPROM

ANSWER

A ROM chip that is erasable using an electrical charge.

QUESTION 225

EMI

ANSWER

The disruption of signal transmission caused by the radiation of electrical and magnetic fields. Electric motors are a common source of EMI.

QUESTION 226

EMP

ANSWER

A large burst of electromagnetic energy, as from a nuclear explosion, that has the potential to damage communications and power lines within a large geographic area, depending on the size and location of the pulse

QUESTION 227

electronic KVM switch

ANSWER

A KVM switch that uses software and special keyboard commands to switch among controlled computers. Also called anactive KVM switch.

QUESTION 228

electro-photosensitive drum

ANSWER

In a laser printer, a metal drum with an electro-photosensitive coating to which a charge can be applied by a laser beam.

QUESTION 229

ESD

ANSWER

The sudden and uncontrolled movement of electricity from an object with a greater charge to one with a lesser charge. Also called static electricity.

QUESTION 230

embedded systems

ANSWER

A special-purpose computer designed for a certain task and installed within a device.

QUESTION 231

ERD

ANSWER

A special disk used for recovering an OS failure in Windows 2000.

QUESTION 232

Emergency Repair Process

ANSWER

A Windows 2000 recovery tool requiring an up-to-date emergency repair disk (ERD) or recent emergency repair information stored on the local hard disk

QUESTION 233

Enable Boot Logging

ANSWER

An Advanced Options menu choice that creates a log of the Windows startup in a file named NTBTLOG.TXT and saved in thesystemroot folder (normally C:\Windows).

QUESTION 234

Enable Low Resolution Video

ANSWER

In Windows Vista and Windows 7, an Advanced Options menu choice that starts Windows normally, except that the video mode is changed to the lowest resolution, using the currently installed video driver. This option does not switch to the basic Windows video driver.

QUESTION 235

Enable VGA Mode

ANSWER

In Windows 2000 and Windows XP, an Advanced Options menu choice that starts Windows normally, except that video mode is changed to the lowest resolution, using the currently installed video driver. This option does not switch to the basic Windows video driver.

QUESTION 236

encrypted authentication

ANSWER

A security service in which authentication credentials are encrypted (user name and password) before transmission over a network.

QUESTION 237

Encrypting File System (EFS)

ANSWER

A security feature of many Windows versions that allows it to encrypt files on an NTFS volume

QUESTION 238

encryption

ANSWER

The conversion of data into a special format that cannot be read by anyone unless they have a software key to convert it back into its usable form.

QUESTION 239

ECP mode

ANSWER

A mode for parallel ports that allows access to special features in the PC called DMA channels. This mode is approximately ten times faster than regular bidirectional mode and is designed for printers and scanners.

QUESTION 240

EIDE

ANSWER

A standard for hard drives that attach to the Parallel AT Attachment (PATA) interface.

QUESTION 241

EPP mode

ANSWER

A parallel port mode that has the same performance as ECP but is used with parallel devices other than printers and scanners.

QUESTION 242

EPROM

ANSWER

Erasable programmable read-only memory. A ROM chip that is erasable and reprogrammable through the use of specialized software.

QUESTION 243

erasure lamp

ANSWER

In a laser printer, a high-intensity lamp that, when shone on a portion of the electro-photosensitive drum, removes any remaining charge on that portion of the drum.

QUESTION 244

ECC

ANSWER

A method of memory error-checking that is more sophisticated than parity checking. Like parity checking, it adds an extra bit per byte. In addition, software in the system memory controller uses an algorithm to both detect and correct errors

QUESTION 245

Ethernet

ANSWER

A group of networking standards created by the IEEE 802.3 subcommittee

QUESTION 246

even parity

ANSWER

A memory error-checking method in which the parity bit is used to ensure that the total number of 1s in the data stream is even.

QUESTION 247

exception

ANSWER

In router configuration, a term that is used to describe traffic that is allowed, as in allowing traffic using a certain port number through the router.

QUESTION 248

expansion bus

ANSWER

A grouping of wires built into a PC that, based on certain protocols, transfers data, control signals, and power to printed circuit boards (adapter cards) that are plugged into connectors in it.

QUESTION 249

ExpressCard

ANSWER

A PCMCIA card standard that comes in two interfaces: PCIe and USB 2.0

QUESTION 250

extended partition

ANSWER

A partition type that can exist on a basic disk and have one or more logical drive letters assigned to it. A Windows operating system cannot boot from this type of partition

QUESTION 251

EVGA

ANSWER

A VESA standard for graphics adapters with a maximum graphics resolution of 1024 × 768 pixels

QUESTION 252

extension magnet

ANSWER

A long-handled tool with a magnet on one end, used to pick up small objects containing iron.

QUESTION 253

external cache

ANSWER

In a CPU, special memory that resides outside the CPU's core and is used to temporarily store instructions and data in order to increase the processing speed. Also called Level 2 (L2) cache and Level 3 (L3) cache, depending on the design of the CPU and motherboard.

QUESTION 254

External Serial ATA (eSATA)

ANSWER

An extension of the SATA standard for external SATA devices, with speeds triple that of USB 2.0.

QUESTION 255

Fast Ethernet

ANSWER

Using the same cabling as 10BaseT or 100Base-T, operates at 100 Mbps and uses different network interface cards.

QUESTION 256

fast page mode (FPM)

ANSWER

An early technology for increasing the performance of DRAM.

QUESTION 257

FAT file system

ANSWER

A file system in which one of the basic structures is a table used for allocating space.

QUESTION 258

FAT12

ANSWER

A version of the FAT file system for very small drives—mainly for floppy drives, using a 12-bit file allocation table.

QUESTION 259

FAT16

ANSWER

A version of the FAT file system used by MS-DOS for hard drives, using a 16-bit file allocation table.

QUESTION 260

FAT32

ANSWER

A version of the FAT file system used by hard drives and some flash drives (thumb drives, etc.), using a 32-bit file allocation table.

QUESTION 261

fiber-optic cable

ANSWER

A cable medium that transmits light pulses rather than electrical signals, so it is not susceptible to electromagnetic interference (EMI).

QUESTION 262

FRU

ANSWER

A component that you can install into a system onsite, such as memory modules, heat sinks, and CMOS batteries

QUESTION 263

file

ANSWER

Information organized as a unit into a container. The author (creator) of a file controls how much information the file contains.

QUESTION 264

FAT

ANSWER

The file system component in the ___file system in which the OS creates a table that serves as a map of where files reside on disk

QUESTION 265

file signature verification

ANSWER

A process applied to digitally signed code to unencrypt the signature data and use the information to verify the program code was not modified since the signature was added.

QUESTION 266

file system

ANSWER

The logical structure on disk that allows the operating system to save and retrieve files.

QUESTION 267

FTP

ANSWER

A protocol for computer-to-computer (host-to-host) transfer of files over a TCP/IP network, regardless of the operating system in use.

QUESTION 268

firewall

ANSWER

A computer (or dedicated device) that sits between a private network and an untrusted network and examines all traffic in and out of the network it is protecting. It will block any traffic it recognizes as a potential threat, using a variety of techniques.

QUESTION 269

firmware

ANSWER

Software instructions stored in ROM chips. It exists on most PC components and on the motherboard.

QUESTION 270

fixed input power supply

ANSWER

A power supply that only accepts one input power voltage.

QUESTION 271

flash BIOS

ANSWER

BIOS that can be electronically upgraded.

QUESTION 272

flash memory

ANSWER

A type of solid-state storage that is commonly used in a variety of devices, such as digital cameras, which often use CompactFlash.

QUESTION 273

flash ROM

ANSWER

A technology for ROM that can be reprogrammed using special software.

QUESTION 274

flashing

ANSWER

The act of electronically upgrading BIOS.

QUESTION 275

flat panel display (FPD)

ANSWER

A computer display that uses liquid crystal or plasma technology and does not require the bulk of a large picture tube. The screen enclosure can be as thin as one to two inches.

QUESTION 276

floating-point unit (FPU)

ANSWER

A type of arithmetic logic unit (ALU) that is used to perform specialized functions, such as division and large decimal number operations. Also called a math coprocessor.

QUESTION 277

floppy disk

ANSWER

A magnetic storage device that contains a thin internal plastic disk, capable of receiving magnetic charges contained in the thin magnetic coating on the disk.

QUESTION 278

floppy disk drive

ANSWER

A drive used for reading from and writing to removable floppy disks.

QUESTION 279

Fn key

ANSWER

A special modifier key on a laptop keyboard that when pressed together with certain alphanumeric keys, changes the output of the pressed key. It is often called the function key.

QUESTION 280

Foreign

ANSWER

In Disk Management, the status given to a dynamic disk that has not had its configuration information (stored on the disk) imported into Windows. This status occurs when a dynamic disk is moved to a different Windows computer or when a dynamic disk fails.

QUESTION 281

form factor

ANSWER

On a motherboard, the type and location of components, as well as the size of the board itself.

QUESTION 282

format

ANSWER

A process that places the logical structure of a file system on a partitioned volume.

QUESTION 283

frame relay

ANSWER

A type of switched network used by phone companies.

QUESTION 284

fraud

ANSWER

The use of deceit and trickery to persuade someone to hand over money or valuables.

QUESTION 285

FSB

ANSWER

An internal bus in a CPU that connects it to memory and video.

QUESTION 286

full-duplex

ANSWER

In reference to networks, communications in both directions at the same time.

QUESTION 287

fusing

ANSWER

In the laser printing process, the step at which the heat-sensitive toner is fused to the paper by heated fusing rollers.

QUESTION 288

fusing lamp

ANSWER

In a laser printer, the lamp that heats the fusing rollers.

QUESTION 289

fusing rollers

ANSWER

In the laser printer, the heated rollers that fuse the toner to the paper.

QUESTION 290

gadget

ANSWER

A small program, such as those that can be run from the Windows Sidebar.

QUESTION 291

Gigabit Ethernet

ANSWER

Also called 1000Base-T, this networking standard supports speeds up to 1 Gbps.

QUESTION 292

GSM

ANSWER

The cellular network standards used by AT&T and T-Mobile.

QUESTION 293

graphical processing unit (GPU)

ANSWER

A processor on a graphics adapter used to render graphics images for the display, saving the CPU for other functions.

QUESTION 294

GUI

ANSWER

A user interface that takes advantage of the video system's graphics capabilities for manipulated graphic elements that represent objects and tasks.

QUESTION 295

grayware

ANSWER

Threats that are not truly malicious code, but can have indirect negative effects, such as decreasing performance or using up bandwidth. Grayware includes spyware, adware, spam, and spim.

QUESTION 296

hacker

ANSWER

A perpetrator of malicious software attacks against computers and networks.

QUESTION 297

half-duplex

ANSWER

In networks, when data can travel in either direction, but only in one direction at a time

QUESTION 298

hard disk drive

ANSWER

A magnetic storage device that stores data on metal platters that have a coating that holds data in the form of changes to small magnetic particles in the coating

QUESTION 299

HAL

ANSWER

A component of the Windows operating system that resides in a file and is loaded into memory during the kernel loading phase of the Windows startup.

QUESTION 300

HD-DVD

ANSWER

The high-definition optical disc formatting standard, promoted by Toshiba, that was defeated by the Blu-ray Disc standard as the widely accepted high-definition standard.

QUESTION 301

heat sink

ANSWER

A heat dissipation device, usually a passive metal object with a flat surface attached to a component, such as a chip.

QUESTION 302

h-hold

ANSWER

A CRT video setting, also known at horizontal hold, that holds the image horizontally on the screen.

QUESTION 303

hibernate

ANSWER

A Windows sleep mode that uses hard drive space to save all the programs and data that are in memory at the time you choose this mode. The computer then completely shuts down and requires no power while it is hibernating.

QUESTION 304

hidden attribute

ANSWER

A file attribute that is given to a file to indicate it should not be visible in Windows Explorer unless View settings override the attribute and allow the file to be shown.

QUESTION 305

High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection

ANSWER

A feature of HDMI that prevents people from illegally copying HD DVDs. See also High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI).

QUESTION 306

HDMI

ANSWER

An interface standard for use with DVD players, digital television (DTV) players, set-top cable or satellite service boxes, and other devices. It combines audio and video signals into an uncompressed signal and has a bandwidth of up to 5 GB/second. Only one specially designed cable is required where previously several were required.

QUESTION 307

high-voltage power supply (HVPS)

ANSWER

Any power supply that provides high voltage, such as those in laser printers and CRTs.

QUESTION 308

horizontal position

ANSWER

A setting on an LCD display that adjusts the viewable area of the display horizontally.

QUESTION 309

hot spot

ANSWER

A physical area where a Wi-Fi network connects to the Internet.

QUESTION 310

hot swapping

ANSWER

The act of safely installing/uninstalling or attaching/removing a device while a computer is up and running.

QUESTION 311

hot-swappable drive

ANSWER

A drive that can be safely installed and removed while a computer is up and running without damaging the data stored on the drive.

QUESTION 312

hub

ANSWER

[1] A device that is the central connecting point of a LAN. It is little more than a multiport repeater taking incoming signals on one port and repeating them to all other ports. Ethernet __ have been largely replaced by Ethernet switches. [2] A multiport connecting device for USB devices.

QUESTION 313

hyper threading

ANSWER

A CPU technology that allows two threads to execute at the same time within a single execution core. This technology is considered to be partially parallel execution. Intel introduced it in the Pentium 4 Xeon CPU. Also known as simultaneous multithreading (SMT).

QUESTION 314

HTML

ANSWER

The language of Web pages. Web designers use this language to create Web page code, which your Web browser converts into the pages you view on your screen.

QUESTION 315

HTTP

ANSWER

The information transfer protocol of the World Wide Web (WWW). Included in HTTP are the commands Web browsers use to request Web pages from Web servers and then display them on the screen of the local computer.

QUESTION 316

I/O address

ANSWER

An assigned address or range of addresses on a system's address bus that, together with an interrupt request line (IRQ), allows a device to be recognized by the processor.

QUESTION 317

icon

ANSWER

In an operating system GUI, a tiny graphic representing an application, folder, disk, menu item, or other entity.

QUESTION 318

identity theft

ANSWER

This occurs when someone collects personal information belonging to another person and uses that information to fraudulently make purchases, open new credit accounts, and even obtain new driver's licenses and other forms of identification in the victim's name.

QUESTION 319

IEC-320 connector

ANSWER

A slide switch on the exterior of a PC power supply used to switch between two input voltages.

QUESTION 320

IEEE

ANSWER

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, an international nonprofit organization that sets standards as part of its charter.

QUESTION 321

IEEE 1284

ANSWER

A parallel interface standard that supports bidirectional communication and transfer rates of up to 2 MBps.

QUESTION 322

IEEE 1394

ANSWER

An external serial bus standardized by the IEEE. Apple first developed it as FireWire. Other manufacturers call it i.link or Lynx. It can support up to 63 daisy-chained devices. Since the introduction of the faster update, IEEE 1394b, the original standard is called IEEE 1394a.

QUESTION 323

IEEE 1394a

ANSWER

The original version of the IEEE 1394 standard that supports speeds up to 400 Mbps.

QUESTION 324

IEEE 1394b

ANSWER

The second version of the IEEE 1394 standard; it supports speeds up to 3.2 Gbps and distances of up to 100 meters.

QUESTION 325

IEEE 1394c-2006

ANSWER

The third version of the IEEE 1394 standard; it is a departure from the old standards in that it uses Category 5e twisted pair cable with RJ-45 connectors, combining Ethernet and FireWire.

QUESTION 326

impact printer

ANSWER

A type of printer that transfers ink to paper by causing a print head to strike a printer ribbon containing ink against the paper.

QUESTION 327

inactive KVM switch

ANSWER

A type of KVM switch that is controlled through a mechanical switch on the box

QUESTION 328

Independent Basic Service Set (IBSS)

ANSWER

A small group of computers communicating wirelessly with one another without the use of a centralized wireless access point (WAP).

QUESTION 329

industry standard architecture (ISA)

ANSWER

A very old expansion bus standard, seen in the early IBM PC.

QUESTION 330

Infrared (IR)

ANSWER

Light waves in the infrared spectrum.

QUESTION 331

Infrared Data Association (IrDA)

ANSWER

An organization that creates specifications for infrared wireless communication.

QUESTION 332

infrastructure mode

ANSWER

A wireless mode requiring a wireless access point (WAP).

QUESTION 333

ink cartridge

ANSWER

A small cassette containing an ink reservoir used to provide the medium for certain printers. It will only fit a certain model printer.

QUESTION 334

inkjet

ANSWER

A type of printer that uses one of several technologies to apply wet ink to paper to create text or graphic printouts

QUESTION 335

I/O

ANSWER

In reference to computers, the pathways or methods for what goes into a computer in the form of data and instructions and similarly what comes out of the computer in many forms, including an onscreen display, a printout sent to a printer, or data sent to another device or computer.

QUESTION 336

Integrated Access Device (IAD)

ANSWER

A device that converts digital signals from the broadband connection to voice for the analog phone and the analog voice signals to digital signals for the digital network.

QUESTION 337

IDE

ANSWER

An early PC hard drive interface.

QUESTION 338

Integrated Service Digital Network (ISDN)

ANSWER

An early international standard for sending voice and data over digital telephone wires. ISDN uses existing telephone circuits or higher-speed conditioned lines to get speeds of either 64 Kbps or 128 Kbps. the lines also have the ability to carry voice and data simultaneously over the circuit.

QUESTION 339

Intel Corporation

ANSWER

One of the two prevailing CPU manufacturers.

QUESTION 340

Intel x86 Specification

ANSWER

An Intel specification for the PC 32-bit architecture defining CPUs, motherboards, and other components.

QUESTION 341

internal bus

ANSWER

The bus within a CPU that connects the CPU to external components.

QUESTION 342

internal cache memory

ANSWER

In a CPU, special memory that resides within the CPU's core and is used to temporarily store instructions and data in order to increase the processing speed. Also called L1 cache.

QUESTION 343

InterNational Committee on Information Technology Standards (INCITS)

ANSWER

A standards organization, of which the T10 SCSI committee maintains the SCSI standard.

QUESTION 344

Internet

ANSWER

The worldwide interconnection of networks that can be accessed with various Internet-based software. The World Wide Web is one of the many services of the Internet.

QUESTION 345

ICMP

ANSWER

A subprotocol of IP that detects and reports problems that can cause errors.

QUESTION 346

Internet Explorer (IE)

ANSWER

A Web browser created by Microsoft.

QUESTION 347

Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP)

ANSWER

A protocol used by e-mail clients for communicating with e-mail servers. This protocol is replacing the POP protocol. IMAP allows users to connect to e-mail servers and not only retrieve e-mail, which removes the messages from the server, as they can do with the POP protocol, but also manage their stored messages without removing them from the server.

QUESTION 348

IP

ANSWER

One of the main protocols of the TCP/IP protocol suite, IP manages logical addressing of network packets so routing protocols can route the packets over the network.

QUESTION 349

ISP

ANSWER

A company in the business of providing Internet access to users.

QUESTION 350

internetwork

ANSWER

An interconnected network. The Internet is the largest example.

QUESTION 351

IRQ

ANSWER

An assigned channel over which a device can send a signal to the processor to get its attention.

QUESTION 352

intranet

ANSWER

A private internetwork.

QUESTION 353

inverter

ANSWER

A device that converts DC current to AC. An inverter is required in a laptop to provide the AC current required by the display.

QUESTION 354

IP packet filtering

ANSWER

A firewall service that inspects (or filters) each packet that enters or leaves the network, applying a set of security rules defined by a network administrator, and not allowing packets that fail inspection to pass between networks.

QUESTION 355

IP router

ANSWER

A network connection device that routes IP packets between networks.

QUESTION 356

IPCONFIG

ANSWER

A command-line utility installed on a Windows computer with the TCP/IP protocol suite; it's used to view the IP configuration of a network connection and to perform certain administrative tasks.

QUESTION 357

jargon

ANSWER

The use of words, often technical and uncommon, that both parties understand in the same way.

QUESTION 358

jumper

ANSWER

On a circuit board, a small connector that slides down on a pair of pins jutting up from the board. Multiple pins are often side-by-side, and a jumper joins a pair of them.

QUESTION 359

key fob

ANSWER

A small device containing a microchip used to generate unique passwords for logging on to a computer or a network.

QUESTION 360

keystroke logger

ANSWER

A hardware device or a program that monitors and records a user's every keystroke, usually without the user's knowledge.

QUESTION 361

KVM over IP

ANSWER

A remote KVM switch that captures the keyboard, video, and mouse signals, encodes them into IP packets, and sends them over an IP network.

QUESTION 362

KVM switch

ANSWER

A device that in its traditional configuration as a local KVM switch connects a single keyboard, video display, and mouse to two or more computer systems, allowing the user to switch control from one computer to another.

QUESTION 363

land

ANSWER

A raised area on an optical disc that is alternated with depressed areas to be interpreted as data.

QUESTION 364

LGA

ANSWER

A processor packaging that uses pads on the processor that come in contact with pins in the socket on the motherboard, permitting a higher density than possible with PGA.

QUESTION 365

laptop

ANSWER

A small, easily transported computer, generally weighing less than 7 pounds and with roughly the same dimensions as a 1- to 2-inch-thick stack of magazines

QUESTION 366

laser beam

ANSWER

A coherent and concentrated light beam, also simply called a laser.

QUESTION 367

laser printer

ANSWER

A printer that uses a light beam (laser) in the printing process.

QUESTION 368

Last Known Good Configuration

ANSWER

A Windows Advanced Options menu choice that restores a group of registry keys containing system settings such as services and drivers.

QUESTION 369

latency

ANSWER

The amount of time it takes a packet to travel from one point to another.

QUESTION 370

LED

ANSWER

A tiny bulb light found on many devices, often used to indicate operational status.

QUESTION 371

letterbox

ANSWER

The black box that appears around an image, such as a widescreen video when it is displayed on a screen with a 4:3 aspect ratio.

QUESTION 372

line printer

ANSWER

A printer that creates printed output line by line.

QUESTION 373

liquid cooling system

ANSWER

A cooling system that uses liquid to transfer heat away from components.

QUESTION 374

LCD

ANSWER

A display device that uses liquid crystals to display images.

QUESTION 375

lit pixel

ANSWER

A pixel that is permanently turned on, causing the pixel to show constantly as red, green, or blue. Also called a stuck pixel.

QUESTION 376

lithium-ion (Li-ion) battery

ANSWER

A type of rechargeable battery used in laptops and other portable devices.

QUESTION 377

local area network (LAN)

ANSWER

A network that covers a relatively small area, such as a building, home, office, or campus. The typical distances are measured in hundreds of meters.

QUESTION 378

local group account

ANSWER

In Windows, a security account that contains one or more local user accounts, and when a computer is a member of a Windows domain, may also contain domain user or group accounts.

QUESTION 379

local remote KVM switch

ANSWER

A remote KVM switch that uses either Cat 5 or USB cabling. The distance it can be from the computers it controls is a function of the length limits of the cabling; it normally uses a proprietary protocol and special hardware.

QUESTION 380

local user account

ANSWER

A security account that exists in a local security accounts database.

QUESTION 381

logical block address (LBA)

ANSWER

A method for supporting up to 8.3 GB capacity hard drives. Both the BIOS and hard drive system must use this

QUESTION 382

long filename (LFN)

ANSWER

A file or folder name that breaks the 8.3 file-naming convention used in the FAT file system. This term continues to be used on newer file systems.

QUESTION 383

loopback plug

ANSWER

A plug designed for testing a specific port type (e.g., serial, parallel, or USB). The plug does not connect to a cable but reroutes the sending pins to the receiving pins. Using special software on the computer, a loopback test is performed in which signals are both sent and received.

QUESTION 384

low-voltage differential (LVD)

ANSWER

A technology for transferring serial data at high speeds

QUESTION 385

LPT

ANSWER

A name used by the Windows operating systems to identify any parallel port.

QUESTION 386

LPT1

ANSWER

The name used by the Windows operating systems to identify the first parallel port.

QUESTION 387

LPT2

ANSWER

The name used by the Windows operating systems to identify the second parallel port.

QUESTION 388

Lucent connector (LC)

ANSWER

A fiber-optic connector that has a snap coupling and, at 1.25 mm, is half the size of the SC connector.

QUESTION 389

luminance

ANSWER

The signal in a television transmission that contains the brightness of the image.

QUESTION 390

magnetic mass storage

ANSWER

Device that stores digital data on magnetized media, such as floppy disks, the metal platters in hard disk drives, and magnetic tape media used in tape drives.

QUESTION 391

malware

ANSWER

Software created to perform malicious acts. Also called malicious software.

QUESTION 392

mass storage device

ANSWER

A device that stores a large amount of information, even when it is powered off.

QUESTION 393

MBR

ANSWER

The first physical sector on a hard disk, which contains the initial boot program that the BIOS loads into memory during bootup. It also contains the partition table.

QUESTION 394

master drive

ANSWER

The role of the first EIDE drive on a PATA channel.

QUESTION 395

master file table (MFT)

ANSWER

A part of the NTFS file system used to store a transaction-based database, with all file accesses treated as transactions, and if a transaction is not complete, NTFS will roll back to the last successful transaction.

QUESTION 396

MSDS

ANSWER

A standardized document that contains general information, ingredients, and fire and explosion warnings as well as health, disposal, and safe transportation information about a particular product

QUESTION 397

Mechanical Transfer Registered Jack (MT-RJ) connector

ANSWER

A fiber-optic connector that resembles an RJ-45 network connector and is less expensive and easier to work with than ST or SC connectors.

QUESTION 398

Media Access Control (MAC) address

ANSWER

The hardware address of a network device, also called the Ethernet address (on Ethernet devices) or NIC address.

QUESTION 399

media bay

ANSWER

A compartment in a portable computer's case that holds a single media device that can be swapped with another. For instance, you may swap an optical drive, a secondary hard drive, or a floppy drive into and out of a single bay.

QUESTION 400

memory

ANSWER

A computer's temporary working space, usually in DRAM chips.

QUESTION 401

memory address

ANSWER

A logical memory address defined in a processor's address bus that allows the system to access physical RAM or ROM memory locations.

QUESTION 402

memory bank

ANSWER

In reference to a memory module, the number of memory modules required to match the data bus width of the processor.

QUESTION 403

MCC

ANSWER

The portion of the chipset that controls communications between the CPU and system RAM.

QUESTION 404

metropolitan area network (MAN)

ANSWER

A network that covers a metropolitan area, usually using high-speed fiber-optic cable (operating in the gigabits-per-second range).

QUESTION 405

microcode

ANSWER

One of many low-level instructions built into the control unit of a CPU. Also called a microprogram.

QUESTION 406

MicroDIMM

ANSWER

A RAM module designed for subcompact and laptop computers. It is half the size of a SoDIMM module.

QUESTION 407

MMC

ANSWER

Introduced in Windows 2000, a user interface for Windows administration tools that is flexible and configurable.

QUESTION 408

Microsoft Product Activation (MPA)

ANSWER

Microsoft's product activation program.

QUESTION 409

Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium

ANSWER

A version of Windows Vista that includes Windows Media Center, which supports advanced multimedia functions.

QUESTION 410

Microsoft Windows XP Media Center

ANSWER

A version of Windows XP that includes Windows Media Center, which supports advanced multimedia functions.

QUESTION 411

MIMO (multiple input/multiple output)

ANSWER

A technology that makes 802.11n speeds possible, using multiple antennas to send and receive digital data in simultaneous radio streams that increases performance.

QUESTION 412

Mini PCI

ANSWER

A standard used in laptops that is based on PCI

QUESTION 413

mini-audio connector

ANSWER

Audio connectors that use a 1/8" single pin plug.

QUESTION 414

miniconnector

ANSWER

A common connector used to connect a power supply to floppy drives.

QUESTION 415

mini-DIN-6

ANSWER

A connector commonly used for PC keyboards. It is much smaller than the original DIN connector.

QUESTION 416

mini-notebook

ANSWER

The smallest laptop type, weighing less than 3 pounds. See also netbook and mini-notebook.

QUESTION 417

mirrored set

ANSWER

Two disk drives used for RAID 1, in which data is written to both drives at the same time, a practice called mirroring.

QUESTION 418

mirroring

ANSWER

The act of writing to two disk drives at the same time, creating identical drives.

QUESTION 419

mobo

ANSWER

Slang for motherboard.

QUESTION 420

modding

ANSWER

The practice, mostly among gamers, of modifying a computer case.

QUESTION 421

mode

ANSWER

In fiber-optics, a single light wave passing down a cable.

QUESTION 422

modem

ANSWER

Traditionally, this term only applied to the type of device described in the definition for analog modem. Now, it is also used for the digital devices in DSL and cable data communications.

QUESTION 423

molex connector

ANSWER

A common connector used to connect a power supply to internal peripherals.

QUESTION 424

motherboard

ANSWER

The circuit board in a computer to which all other components directly or indirectly connect. Also called a mainboard, system board, mobo, or planar board.

QUESTION 425

mount point

ANSWER

The connecting point of a mounted drive to a folder on an NTFS volume.

QUESTION 426

mounted drive

ANSWER

A drive that is mapped to an empty folder on an NTFS volume and is assigned a drive path rather than drive letters.

QUESTION 427

MSCONFIG

ANSWER

The filename for the System Configuration Utility, which allows you to test various scenarios for Windows startup for troubleshooting purposes.

QUESTION 428

multifunction device (MFD)

ANSWER

A device that combines two or more devices, such as a printer, scanner, and fax machine.

QUESTION 429

multifunction printers (MFDs)

ANSWER

A printer that includes one or more other functions, such as a scanner and fax machine.

QUESTION 430

multi-GPU solution

ANSWER

The use of two or more video adapters (hence the term "GPU") to drive a single display for the purpose of increasing performance.

QUESTION 431

Multilingual User Interface (MUI)

ANSWER

The code used to provide multiple language support to Windows.

QUESTION 432

Multimedia Terminal Adapter (MTA)

ANSWER

On a cable network, the device used at the customer site for the analog/digital conversion.

QUESTION 433

multimeter

ANSWER

A handheld device used to measure electrical resistance, voltage, and/or current.

QUESTION 434

multimode fiber (MMF)

ANSWER

Fiber-optic cable in which multiple light waves can pass simultaneously. Usually larger in diameter than single-mode fiber; and each wave uses a certain portion of the fiber cable for transmission.

QUESTION 435

multi-monitor

ANSWER

The use of more than one monitor on a single computer.

QUESTION 436

multiplexing

ANSWER

In telecommunications, a technique that combines multiple messages or signals onto a single transmission channel.

QUESTION 437

musical instrument digital interface (MIDI)

ANSWER

A standard for interconnecting electronic musical instruments to communicate with computers and among themselves.

QUESTION 438

NetBEUI

ANSWER

A non-routable network protocol suite for use only in small networks.

QUESTION 439

NetBIOS

ANSWER

A protocol developed in the 1980s by IBM for managing names on a network. Also used by Microsoft in early networking. Replaced by DNS on TCP/IP networks.

QUESTION 440

netbook

ANSWER

A scaled-down laptop in the ultra-portable category, designed for Internet access. See also ultra-portable and mini-notebook.

QUESTION 441

NETSTAT

ANSWER

A command-line command, installed with the TCP/IP protocol suite, which provides statistical information about the TCP/IP protocols and network connections involving your computer, depending on the switches you use when you enter the command.

QUESTION 442

network address translation (NAT)

ANSWER

A TCP/IP protocol developed as a solution to the dwindling number of IP addresses on the Internet and that also serves to hide IP addresses on a private network from the Internet.

QUESTION 443

network client

ANSWER

Software that runs on the computers in a network and that receives services from servers.

QUESTION 444

network interface card (NIC)

ANSWER

An adapter used to connect a computer or other device to a network medium.

QUESTION 445

network operating system (NOS)

ANSWER

An operating system that runs on a network server and provides file sharing and access to other resources, account management, authentication, and authorization services.

QUESTION 446

New Low-profile eXtended (NLX)

ANSWER

An Intel standard for motherboards targeted to the low-end consumer market that includes built-in components, while saving space and fitting into a smaller case

QUESTION 447

nickel metal hydride (NiMH) batteries

ANSWER

A now-obsolete type of rechargeable battery used in laptops and other portable devices, replaced by lithium-ion batteries.

QUESTION 448

nickel-cadmium (NiCD)

ANSWER

The type of battery used in the first portable PCs, which was heavy and inefficient.

QUESTION 449

nonvolatile memory

ANSWER

Memory that does not require power to keep stored data intact. Also called flash memory.

QUESTION 450

Northbridge

ANSWER

One or more chips in a computer's chipset that controls communications between the CPU and RAM on the motherboard.

QUESTION 451

NSLOOKUP

ANSWER

A command-line utility, installed with the TCP/IP protocol suite, that is used to troubleshoot DNS problems by querying DNS name servers and displaying the results of the queries.

QUESTION 452

NTFS

ANSWER

The default Windows file system that includes many important features, including encryption and permissions.

QUESTION 453

NTFS permissions

ANSWER

In Microsoft Windows, NTFS permissions are used to specify and control which users and groups can access certain files and folders and what each user or group can do with them.

QUESTION 454

NTLDR

ANSWER

The boot loader file in Windows 2000 and Windows XP. During the boot loader phase, NTLDR takes control of the system, switches the CPU to protected mode, starts the file system, and reads the BOOT.INI file.

QUESTION 455

odd parity

ANSWER

A memory error-checking method in which the parity bit is used to ensure that the total number of 1s in the data stream is odd.

QUESTION 456

OCR

ANSWER

Software that takes a scanned image and interprets the patterns in the image into alphanumeric characters.

QUESTION 457

optical drive

ANSWER

A disc drive that uses laser technology to read and/or write to special discs.

QUESTION 458

OEM

ANSWER

In regard to Windows operating systems, a version of Windows that is designed to work with a certain manufacturer's equipment.

QUESTION 459

overclocking

ANSWER

The practice of forcing a CPU or other computer component to run at a higher clock rate than the manufacturer intended.

QUESTION 460

P1 power connector

ANSWER

A 20- or 24- pin connector that supplies power from a PC's power supply to the motherboard.

QUESTION 461

P412V

ANSWER

A 4-pin connector that, in addition to a 20-pin connector, is part of motherboard power connector that follows the ATX 12V standard.

QUESTION 462

paging file

ANSWER

A file used by Windows for virtual memory. Also called the swap file

QUESTION 463

PATA

ANSWER

A hard drive interface that transfers data in parallel

QUESTION 464

parallel port

ANSWER

An interface on a PC that originally was unidirectional and operated at a speed of 150 KBps, but now has several operation modes.

QUESTION 465

parity

ANSWER

A type of memory checking in which every eight-bit byte of data is accompanied by a ninth bit

QUESTION 466

partition

ANSWER

(n.) An area of a physical hard disk that defines space that will be used for logical drives. (v.) To define the space to be used for logical drives using a special program, such as the Windows Setup program.

QUESTION 467

partition type

ANSWER

The style of partition on a basic disk, which includes primary and extended.

QUESTION 468

parts grabber

ANSWER

A pen-sized tool that has a plunger at one end. When pressed, the plunger causes small, hooked prongs to extend from the other end of the tool for retrieving dropped objects from inside a computer.

QUESTION 469

passive matrix display

ANSWER

An LCD display using an old technology that has a grid of horizontal and vertical wires with a transistor at the end of each wire. When two transistors (one at the x-axis and one at the y-axis) send voltage along their wires, the pixel at the intersection of the two wires lights up.

QUESTION 470

password

ANSWER

A string of characters that a user enters, along with an identifier, such as a user name, in order to be authenticated.

QUESTION 471

password cracker

ANSWER

A program used to discover a password.

QUESTION 472

patch

ANSWER

A software fix for a single problem.

QUESTION 473

PC Card

ANSWER

The early standard developed by PCMCIA for credit-card-sized devices used in laptops.

QUESTION 474

PCIe (peripheral component interconnect express)

ANSWER

An expansion bus architecture that uses serial communications rather than the parallel communications of PCI. Also called PCI Express and PCI-E.

QUESTION 475

PCIe Mini Card

ANSWER

The successor to the Mini PCI. It has a 64-bit data bus and is half the size of a Mini PCI Card

QUESTION 476

peer-to-peer network

ANSWER

A network in which all of the computers essentially operate as both servers (providing access to shared resources) and clients (accessing those shared resources).

QUESTION 477

Performance Monitor

ANSWER

A utility in Windows NT for gathering and viewing performance data involving memory, disks, processors, network, and other objectives.

QUESTION 478

peripheral component interconnect (PCI)

ANSWER

Introduced in 1993, the most common expansion bus architecture in PCs in the mid 1990s. It transfers data in parallel over a data bus that is either 32- or 64-bits wide.

QUESTION 479

permanent virtual circuit (PVC)

ANSWER

A virtual communication circuit that is created and remains available between two endpoints, which are normally some form of data terminal equipment (DTE). Telecommunications companies provide PVC service to companies requiring a dedicated circuit between two sites that require communications that are always on.

QUESTION 480

permission

ANSWER

In networking, the authorization to access a computer or resource on a computer. Specific __ levels include read, change, modify, etc.

QUESTION 481

personal area network (PAN)

ANSWER

A communications network made up of personal computing devices, such as computers, telephones, and personal digital assistants.

QUESTION 482

Personal Computer Memory Card International Association (PCMCIA)

ANSWER

An organization that creates standards for laptop computer peripheral devices.

QUESTION 483

Personal Digital Assistant (PDA)

ANSWER

A portable computer small enough to fit in your hand, also referred to as a "palmtop" computer.

QUESTION 484

PGA2

ANSWER

A variation of the PGA CPU packaging that was used with Pentium CPUs.

QUESTION 485

phishing

ANSWER

A fraudulent method of obtaining personal and financial information through the use of pop-ups or e-mail messages that purport to be from a legitimate organization, such as a bank, credit card company, or retailer.

QUESTION 486

PGA

ANSWER

A term used for CPU packaging that indicates that a chip has columns and rows of pins.

QUESTION 487

PING

ANSWER

A command-line tool installed with the TCP/IP protocol suite that is used for testing communications between two hosts.

QUESTION 488

pinned items list

ANSWER

An area on the top left of the Windows XP Start menu containing shortcuts to Windows Update and programs for browsing the Internet and using e-mail.

QUESTION 489

pin-out

ANSWER

A diagram showing the purpose of each wire in a connector.

QUESTION 490

pit

ANSWER

A depressed area on an optical disc that is alternated with raised areas to be interpreted as data.

QUESTION 491

pixel

ANSWER

A single dot on a display screen. A contraction of "Picture Element."

QUESTION 492

plain-old telephone service (POTS)

ANSWER

The traditional wired telephone network.

QUESTION 493

plug and play (PnP)

ANSWER

A system by which the computer BIOS and operating system recognizes a device and the operating system automatically installs and configures a device driver.

QUESTION 494

pointing stick

ANSWER

A pointing device built into some laptop keyboards. It appears to be a very tiny joystick-type button that barely protrudes above the level of the keys.

QUESTION 495

point-to-point protocol (PPP)

ANSWER

A protocol that allows two devices to connect, authenticate, and negotiate what protocols they will use (almost always TCP/IP).

QUESTION 496

Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP)

ANSWER

An enhanced version of PPP, which adds the ability to secure the point-to-point connection with encryption.

QUESTION 497

pop-up blocker

ANSWER

A program that blocks browser pop-ups.

QUESTION 498

pop-up download

ANSWER

A virus that downloads to a user's computer through a pop-up window that appears in a Web browser. It requires an action on the part of a user, such as clicking a button that implies acceptance of something like free information.

QUESTION 499

port

ANSWER

A connection point on a device or computer, sometimes called a socket.

QUESTION 500

port replicator

ANSWER

A device used with a laptop. The port replicator remains on the desktop with external devices connected to ports on it. A laptop then needs only one connection to the port replicator to have access to the peripherals.

QUESTION 501

port triggering

ANSWER

The redirection of incoming traffic to the requesting internal hosts that initiated the communication with an external host.

QUESTION 502

portable computer

ANSWER

Any type of computer that you can easily transport and that contains an all-in-one component layout.

QUESTION 503

POST card

ANSWER

An adapter card used to run a special diagnostic test on a computer as it is powering up. These tests usually go beyond those performed by the system BIOS-based POST.

QUESTION 504

POP

ANSWER

The protocol used to allow client computers to pick up e-mail from mail servers.

QUESTION 505

power management

ANSWER

A group of features in the system BIOS, the chipset, the operating system, device drivers, and the individual components that enable efficient use of power in a computer.

QUESTION 506

power state

ANSWER

A power-usage level.

QUESTION 507

power supply

ANSWER

The component that provides power for all components on the motherboard and internal to the PC case.

QUESTION 508

power supply tester

ANSWER

A specialized device for testing a power supply unit that comes with connectors compatible with the output connectors on a standard power supply.

QUESTION 509

POST

ANSWER

A group of tests, stored in the BIOS and performed as a PC boots up, to check for the presence and function of system components

QUESTION 510

prank program

ANSWER

A joke program that produces strange behavior, such as screen distortions, erratic cursor behavior, or strange icons to appear on the screen.

QUESTION 511

Preboot eXecution Environment

ANSWER

An Intel standard for starting up a computer over the network, without relying on a disk-based operating system. Used to install a new operating system or run diagnostics software

QUESTION 512

primary corona wire

ANSWER

In a laser printer, a wire that stretches across the printer's drum, not touching it, but positioned very close to the drum's surface so it can pass high voltage to the drum.

QUESTION 513

primary master

ANSWER

In reference to IDE PATA drives, the master drive on the first channel.

QUESTION 514

primary partition

ANSWER

A partition type on a basic disk that can have only one logical drive assigned to it encompassing the entire partition. This partition type is also the only type of partition on a basic disk that can be marked as active for booting up an operating system.

QUESTION 515

primary slave

ANSWER

In reference to IDE PATA drives, the slave drive on the first channel.

QUESTION 516

process

ANSWER

The memory space, program code, data, and system resources required by a running program.

QUESTION 517

process ID

ANSWER

An identifier assigned to a process when it starts.

QUESTION 518

process priority level

ANSWER

A value assigned to a process that controls the order in which the program code is executed in relation to other code.

QUESTION 519

processor board

ANSWER

Another name for a motherboard in a laptop.

QUESTION 520

processor bus

ANSWER

A set of wires used by data traveling into and out of a processor.

QUESTION 521

professionalism

ANSWER

A set of behaviors for the workplace that includes how you interact with people and how you treat property

QUESTION 522

Program Compatibility Wizard

ANSWER

A Windows wizard that sets options for starting and running a specific old program that will not otherwise run properly in Windows

QUESTION 523

projector

ANSWER

A device that takes video output and projects it onto a screen for viewing by a larger audience.

QUESTION 524

PROM

ANSWER

A ROM chip that can have programs added to it.

QUESTION 525

protocol

ANSWER

In networking, this is a set of rules for using network hardware and software. In most discussions about networks, this term is assigned to certain network software components.

QUESTION 526

proxy server

ANSWER

A network service that handles the requests for Internet services, such as Web pages, files on an FTP server, and mail for a client without exposing that client's IP address to the Internet.

QUESTION 527

PS/2

ANSWER

Personal System/2, as in PS/2-style mice and keyboards and connectors. Also called mini-DIN connectors.

QUESTION 528

public switched telephone network (PSTN)

ANSWER

The worldwide network that carries traditional voice traffic.

QUESTION 529

quad-core CPU

ANSWER

A CPU containing four CPU cores.

QUESTION 530

Quick Launch bar

ANSWER

An optional toolbar you can add to the taskbar just to the right of the Start button. Shortcuts on this bar launch with a single-click

QUESTION 531

radio frequency (RF)

ANSWER

Signals broadcast through the air.

QUESTION 532

RAID 0

ANSWER

A RAID array in which every time data is written to disk, a portion (block) is written to each disk in turn, creating a "stripe" of data across the member disks. It uses the total disk space in the array for storage, without protecting the data from drive failure.

QUESTION 533

RAID 1

ANSWER

Also called mirroring, this RAID array type provides fault tolerance because all the data is written identically to the two drives in the mirrored set

QUESTION 534

RAID 5

ANSWER

Also called striping with distributed parity or striping with interleave parity, this RAID method involves a set of disks in which every time data is written to disk, a portion is written to each disk in turn, creating a "stripe" of data across the member disks. However, in each stripe, the portion on one disk is not the actual data, but the result of an algorithm performed on the data contained in the other blocks in the stripe. This block is called the parity block, and because of the space required, the total disk space in the array available for data storage is equal to the total disk space less one entire disk.

QUESTION 535

RAID array

ANSWER

Two or more disks working together in one of the several RAID schemes.

QUESTION 536

RAID controller

ANSWER

Specialized hardware used to create and manage a RAID array

QUESTION 537

RDRAM

ANSWER

Memory chips that use a special Rambus channel that has a data transfer rate of 800 MHz. A double channel width results in a 1.6 GHz data transfer. RDRAM sticks use special RIMM slots.

QUESTION 538

RIMM

ANSWER

Both the connectors on the RDRAM memory modules and the motherboard sockets (or slots) that match them.

QUESTION 539

RAM

ANSWER

Memory that is accessible in any (random) order.

QUESTION 540

reactivate

ANSWER

To renew a product activation, required when the activation program discovers significant changes in a computer or the activated product has been installed on a second computer.

QUESTION 541

read/write head

ANSWER

A reading and writing device in a floppy or hard drive that is mounted on an articulated arm that moves back and forth over the floppy disk or metal platter.

QUESTION 542

ROM

ANSWER

Memory that can only be read and that contains program code.

QUESTION 543

real-time clock (RTC)

ANSWER

A chip that keeps track of the date and time on a PC. Set the date and time through your operating system or in the BIOS Setup program.

QUESTION 544

recently used programs list

ANSWER

An area under the pinned items list on the Windows XP Start menu that contains shortcuts to recently run programs.

QUESTION 545

RAID

ANSWER

A group of schemes designed to provide either better performance or improved data reliability through redundancy.

QUESTION 546

refresh rate

ANSWER

A CRT video setting, also known as the vertical refresh rate, that controls the rate per second at which an image appears on the tube.

QUESTION 547

regional settings

ANSWER

Operating system interface settings, such as the language used and the date, time, and currency formats.

QUESTION 548

register

ANSWER

Memory locations within a CPU that is used as a scratch pad for calculations. Modern CPUs have dedicated registers for specific functions and general-purpose registers for multiple purposes.

QUESTION 549

registered jack (RJ)

ANSWER

A rectangular connector with a locking clip on one side and a number designation that refers to the size rather than the number of wires.

QUESTION 550

registration

ANSWER

The process of informing the software manufacturer who the official owner or user of the product is, and providing contact information such as name, address, company, phone number, e-mail address, and so on, about them. Registration is usually a voluntary action.

QUESTION 551

registry

ANSWER

A database of all configuration settings in Windows

QUESTION 552

registry key

ANSWER

In the Windows registry, a folder that may contain one or more sets of settings as well as other keys.

QUESTION 553

Reliability and Performance Monitor

ANSWER

The Windows Vista and Windows 7 tool for gathering and viewing performance data involving memory, disks, processors, network, and other objectives.

QUESTION 554

Remote Assistance

ANSWER

A Windows service designed to allow a user to invite someone to help troubleshoot a problem

QUESTION 555

Remote Desktop

ANSWER

A Windows service that allows a user to connect remotely to a computer and run the Windows desktop on the remote computer, but have the same access as if logged on to the computer and its local network

QUESTION 556

Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP)

ANSWER

An underlying protocol that supports Microsoft Remote Desktop.

QUESTION 557

remote KVM switch

ANSWER

A type of KVM switch that controls computers over a distance that is a function of the cabling and protocols it uses. The two types of switches are local remote KVM switch and KVM over IP.

QUESTION 558

removable storage

ANSWER

Storage media that is removable, meaning the drive stays in place, while the media (disk, disc, or tape) is removed and replaced with another disk, disc, or tape.

QUESTION 559

repeater

ANSWER

A network device that is used to extend the range of a network by taking the signals received on a port from one network and regenerating (repeating) those signals to another port to transmit them on a second network.

QUESTION 560

response time

ANSWER

An LCD display characteristic that indicates the amount of time in milliseconds (ms) it takes for a single pixel to go from the active to the inactive state and back again.

QUESTION 561

Return To OS Choices menu

ANSWER

An Advanced Options menu choice that appears under certain circumstances. When available, selecting this option will return to the OS Choices menu (OS Loader menu).

QUESTION 562

RFI

ANSWER

Radio signals that occur in proximity to equipment that is sensitive to these types of signals.

QUESTION 563

RGB video

ANSWER

A simple type of component video signal that sends three separate signals—red, green, and blue—using three coaxial cables.

QUESTION 564

riser card

ANSWER

In a low-profile PC case, a card that plugs into a motherboard to allow other cards to be inserted at a right angle to the riser card and parallel to the motherboard. Also, a single expansion card containing multiple functions, such as modem, sound, and network.

QUESTION 565

RJ-11

ANSWER

A connector that contains two to four wires and usually attaches phone cables to modems and to wall-mounted phone jacks.

QUESTION 566

RJ-45

ANSWER

A connector that is slightly larger than an RJ-11 connector and contains eight wires. __connectors most commonly attach twisted-pair cables to Ethernet network cards.

QUESTION 567

root directory

ANSWER

In the FAT file system, the top-level directory in which the operating system stores information about files, including a reference to the FAT table so it knows where to find the file's contents on disk. The NTFS file system also has a root, or top-level directory, but NTFS does not rely on this structure in the same way that FAT does.

QUESTION 568

root folder

ANSWER

The top-level folder or directory in the file structure. This appears the same, regardless of the underlying file system.

QUESTION 569

root key

ANSWER

In the Windows registry, the top five folders, each of which is the top of a hierarchical structure. Also called subtrees.

QUESTION 570

rootkit

ANSWER

Malware that hides itself from detection by antimalware programs; it is installed on a computer by someone who has privileged access to the computer.

QUESTION 571

router

ANSWER

A device that sits at the connection between networks and routes packets based on their logical destination addresses.

QUESTION 572

routing information protocol (RIP)

ANSWER

A protocol that allows routers to update their list of routes dynamically. It dates to the 1980s and is considered obsolete; even though, it has been updated a few times and is still supported by most routers.

QUESTION 573

RS-232 port

ANSWER

The classic PC serial port that complies with the Recommended Standard-232 (RS-232) in its circuitry, cabling, and connector design, and transfers data one bit at a time.

QUESTION 574

S/PDIF

ANSWER

Sony-Philips digital interface format—a single-pin RCA phone jack used for transferring digital audio from CD and DVD players to amplifiers and speakers

QUESTION 575

Safe Mode

ANSWER

In Windows, an Advanced Options menu choice that starts Windows without several drivers and components and loads only very basic, non-vendor-specific drivers for mouse, video, keyboard, mass storage, and system services. Safe Mode also displays in low resolution.

QUESTION 576

Safe Mode With Command Prompt

ANSWER

In Windows, an Advanced Options menu choice that will start Windows without the Windows GUI (EXPLORER.EXE) and with only a simple Command Prompt window from which you can launch Windows administrative utilities.

QUESTION 577

Safe Mode With Networking

ANSWER

In Windows, an Advanced Options menu choice that starts Windows without several drivers and components and loads only very basic, non-vendor-specific drivers for mouse, video, keyboard, mass storage, and system services. It also displays in low resolution. The difference between Safe Mode and Safe Mode With Networking is that the latter will launch networking components.

QUESTION 578

satellite communications

ANSWER

A communications system now used for data communications via satellite that usually uses microwave radio frequencies and requires a dish antenna, receiver, and transmitter.

QUESTION 579

Scalable Link Interface (SLI)

ANSWER

A multi-GPU solution developed by NVIDIA.

QUESTION 580

SCSI host adapter

ANSWER

A computer circuit board that attaches to and controls SCSI devices.

QUESTION 581

SCSI ID

ANSWER

A number that identifies a device on a SCSI chain.

QUESTION 582

secondary master

ANSWER

In reference to IDE PATA drives, the master drive on the second channel.

QUESTION 583

secondary slave

ANSWER

In reference to IDE PATA drives, the slave drive on the second channel.

QUESTION 584

second-level domain (SLD)

ANSWER

In the domain name system, a name that is registered under a top-level domain, such as mcgraw-hill.com or microsoft.com.

QUESTION 585

sector translation

ANSWER

An early method for addressing the disparity between the drive geometry supported by PC BIOSs and the physical geometry of drives.

QUESTION 586

secure attention sequence (SAS)

ANSWER

An action, such as the CTRL-ALT-DELETE key combination or the insertion of a smart card, that clears memory of certain types of viruses before a user logs on.

QUESTION 587

Secure Digital (SD) Card

ANSWER

A solid-state storage standard for high-capacity (2, 4, and 8 GB) memory cards that are tiny—32 mm × 24 mm × 2.1 mm—and support high-speed data transfer. They are in portable devices, such as digital video recorders, digital cameras, handheld computers, audio players, and cell phones.

QUESTION 588

secure socket layer (SSL)

ANSWER

A data encryption technology used for securing data transmitted over the Internet.

QUESTION 589

security auditing

ANSWER

A way to monitor security-related events.

QUESTION 590

security policy

ANSWER

A set of rules and practices describing how an organization protects and manages sensitive information

QUESTION 591

serial ATA (SATA)

ANSWER

A drive interface for EIDE drives that transfers data serially at speeds between 150 MBps and 300 MBps and 6 Gbps, depending on the version of the standard.

QUESTION 592

Serial Attached SCSI (SAS)

ANSWER

A marriage of SCSI and Serial ATA, this uses a serial interface to a SCSI bus.

QUESTION 593

server

ANSWER

A dedicated computer that stores data and provides print services or other capabilities to network clients.

QUESTION 594

service pack

ANSWER

A bundle of patches or updates released periodically by a software publisher.

QUESTION 595

Service Set ID (SSID)

ANSWER

A network name used to identify a wireless network. Consisting of up to 32 characters, it travels with the messages on the wireless network. All of the wireless devices on a WLAN must use the same __ in order to communicate.

QUESTION 596

SGRAM

ANSWER

Synchronous graphics random access memory is a type of RAM used on video adapters.

QUESTION 597

shadow mask

ANSWER

A metal plate behind the front of a CRT monitor that focuses the electron beams from the gun

QUESTION 598

share

ANSWER

On a Microsoft Windows network, a resource, such as a file folder or printer, that is available on the network.

QUESTION 599

shared video memory

ANSWER

A portion of system memory used by a video adapter built into a motherboard.

QUESTION 600

shortcut

ANSWER

An icon that represents a link to any object that an icon can represent. Activating a __ (by double-clicking it) is a quick way to access an object or to launch a program from the desktop without having to find the actual location of the object on your computer.

QUESTION 601

sidebar

ANSWER

In Windows Vista, a vertical bar found by default on the right side of the desktop. Here, you will find gadgets and mini-programs.

QUESTION 602

SMTP

ANSWER

A protocol that transfers e-mail messages between mail servers. Clients also use this protocol to send e-mail to mail servers.

QUESTION 603

SIMM

ANSWER

An obsolete memory module standard that was produced in 30-pin and 72-pin sizes. Thirty-pin SIMMs are 8-bit, and 72-pin SIMMs are 32-bit.

QUESTION 604

single-layer (SL)

ANSWER

Pertaining to a DVD drive or disc that can store data in a single layer of pits on each data side.

QUESTION 605

single-mode fiber (SMF)

ANSWER

Fiber-optic cable that allows only a single light wave to pass down the cable.

QUESTION 606

single-sided (SS) DVD

ANSWER

A DVD of any type that can contain data on only one side.

QUESTION 607

slave drive

ANSWER

The role of the second EIDE drive on a PATA channel.

QUESTION 608

slot cover

ANSWER

A metal strip used to cover an empty slot in order to preserve the correct air flow and keep dust out.

QUESTION 609

SCSI

ANSWER

An interface standard developed by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), it is used for both internal and external hard drives and optical drives as well as devices such as printers, modems, scanners, and many other peripherals.

QUESTION 610

smart card

ANSWER

A plastic card, often the size of a credit card, that contains a microchip. The microchip can store information and perform functions, depending on the type of smart card. Some smart cards only store data, whereas others may have a variety of functions, including security cards for facilities or logging on to computers.

QUESTION 611

smart card reader

ANSWER

A device used to scan smart cards.

QUESTION 612

smart phone

ANSWER

A cell phone with Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) functions built in.

QUESTION 613

social engineering

ANSWER

A variety of persuasion techniques used for many purposes—good and bad. People with malicious intent use __ __ to persuade someone to reveal confidential information or give something else of value to the perpetrator.

QUESTION 614

socket

ANSWER

The location where a cable attaches to a computer. Alternatively, a connector on a motherboard for memory, CPUs, power, or other circuitry.

QUESTION 615

socket services

ANSWER

A service of the operating system on a laptop that detects when a card has been inserted.

QUESTION 616

soft power

ANSWER

A power supply and motherboard feature that allows software to turn off a computer rather than only using a physical switch.

QUESTION 617

software firewall

ANSWER

A firewall consisting of software that you can install on any computer, as opposed to the software built into a hardware firewall. Also called personal firewalls because they are designed to be installed on individual desktop computers.

QUESTION 618

solid ink

ANSWER

A type of printer that uses solid, rather than liquid, ink.

QUESTION 619

solid-state storage

ANSWER

Data storage technology with no moving mechanical parts that uses large-capacity, nonvolatile memory, commonly calledflash memory or solid-state drives.

QUESTION 620

SONET

ANSWER

A long-established fiber-optic WAN technology.

QUESTION 621

Sony/Philips Digital Interface (S/PDIF)

ANSWER

A single-pin RCA phone jack for transferring digital audio from CD and DVD players to amplifiers and speakers.

QUESTION 622

Southbridge

ANSWER

A portion of a computer's chipset that controls communications between the CPU and such I/O busses as USB, IDE, PS2, SATA, and others.

QUESTION 623

Spam over Instant Messaging (spim)

ANSWER

Unsolicited messages sent over an instant messaging service, such as Windows Messenger.

QUESTION 624

Speaker On/Off key

ANSWER

A key on a laptop that is combined with the FN key to toggle the laptop's speaker on and off.

QUESTION 625

Speaker Volume Key

ANSWER

A key on a laptop that is combined with the FN key to bring up a small volume control panel on the display. Using the up (↑) or right (→) arrow key, the volume will increase. To decrease the volume, press the FN key and the SPEAKER VOLUME key along with either the left (←) or down (↓) arrow key. This changes the speaker volume at the hardware level, bypassing Windows' volume control.

QUESTION 626

special group

ANSWER

One of several groups that no user can create or modify. The membership of a special group is predefined, and it is available to you only when you assign permissions or rights. A few important special groups are Creator Owner, System, and Everyone.

QUESTION 627

SPGA (staggered pin grid array)

ANSWER

An arrangement of pins on a processor in which the pins are offset in a way that allows for a higher pin density than PGA.

QUESTION 628

spindle

ANSWER

In a disk drive, the rotating shaft used to spin the disks.

QUESTION 629

spyware

ANSWER

A category of software that runs surreptitiously on a user's computer in order to gather information without the user's permission and then sends that information to the people who requested it. (16)

QUESTION 630

stand-alone computer

ANSWER

A computer that is not connected to a network of any kind.

QUESTION 631

Standby

ANSWER

A sleep mode that is available on any computer that supports ACPI power management. It conserves power while saving the desktop in RAM memory in a work state. To resume, you simply press the power button, and the desktop is quickly displayed.

QUESTION 632

Start menu

ANSWER

A menu that opens from the Start button on the taskbar.

QUESTION 633

Start Windows Normally

ANSWER

An Advanced Options menu choice that simply causes Windows to restart normally (if it can).

QUESTION 634

SRAM

ANSWER

The first type of RAM available. It is very fast, compared to DRAM, but also very expensive.

QUESTION 635

status light indicator

ANSWER

One or more lights (usually LEDs) on a device that indicate the device's operational status through the color of the light, by blinking or remaining steady or both.

QUESTION 636

straight-tip (ST) connector

ANSWER

A straight, round connector used to connect fiber-optic cabling to a network device. It has a twist-type coupling.

QUESTION 637

strong password

ANSWER

A password that meets certain criteria in order to be difficult to crack. One definition of a strong password is one that contains at least eight characters, includes a combination of letters, numbers, and other symbols ( _, -, $, and so on) and is easy for you to remember but difficult for others to guess.

QUESTION 638

stylus

ANSWER

The primary input device for a PDA, shaped like a pen and used to press small keys on a keypad, tap the screen to select items, or write data on the screen.

QUESTION 639

subkey

ANSWER

A registry key that exists within another key.

QUESTION 640

sub-mini audio connector

ANSWER

A 3/32" audio connector.

QUESTION 641

subscriber connector (SC)

ANSWER

A square snap coupling for fiber-optic cable, about 2.5 mm wide, used for cable-to-cable connections or to connect cables to network devices. It latches with a push-pull action similar to audio and video jacks.

QUESTION 642

subscription channel (SC)

ANSWER

A paid television subscription service offered by cable television providers.

QUESTION 643

super video graphics array (SVGA)

ANSWER

Any video adapter or monitor that exceeds the VGA standard in resolution and color depth with a maximum resolution of 1600 × 1200.

QUESTION 644

surge protector

ANSWER

A device, usually resembling a power strip, that protects equipment from power surges.

QUESTION 645

S-Video

ANSWER

A video interface, also called Super Video, that transmits video using two signals—luminance, represented by a Y, and chrominance, represented by a C. S-video ports are round to accommodate a round plug with four pins.

QUESTION 646

switch

ANSWER

[1] On computer circuit boards, a very tiny slide that indicates two states. (4). [2] In a network, a network device, much like a hub, except that a switch takes an incoming signal and sends it to only the destination port, avoiding collisions and making it more efficient than a hub.

QUESTION 647

switching mode power supply

ANSWER

A power supply that converts between alternating current and direct current.

QUESTION 648

SXGA

ANSWER

A video graphics mode with a maximum resolution of 1280 × 1024.

QUESTION 649

synchronous dynamic RAM

ANSWER

DRAM that runs at the speed of the system bus (up to 100-133 MHz).

QUESTION 650

system area

ANSWER

The area at the beginning of a disk formatted with the FAT file system. This area contains the boot record, FAT table, and root directory.

QUESTION 651

system attribute

ANSWER

A file attribute assigned to a file by the operating system to identify it as a system file.

QUESTION 652

system file

ANSWER

A program file or some special data file that is part of the operating system and is very important to proper operation of the OS.

QUESTION 653

System File Checker (SFC)

ANSWER

A Windows command prompt utility that uses the WFP (Windows 2000 and Windows XP) or WRP (Windows Vista and Windows 7) service to scan and verify the versions of all protected system files after you restart your computer.

QUESTION 654

System Information (MSINFO32.EXE)

ANSWER

This GUI utility will display a system summary of the hardware, operating system, and other software.

QUESTION 655

System Management Mode (SMM)

ANSWER

A CPU power-saving mode that allows a CPU to reduce its speed without losing its place so it does not stop working altogether. Also allows the CPU to trigger power saving in other components.

QUESTION 656

System Monitor

ANSWER

A utility in Windows XP and Windows 2000 for gathering and viewing performance data involving memory, disks, processors, networks, and other objectives.

QUESTION 657

system requirements

ANSWER

The specific requirements for the level of CPU, amount of memory, and size of the hard disk for the computer on which an operating system can be installed

QUESTION 658

system resources

ANSWER

A finite set of resources controlled by the operating system and critical to the use of all computer components.

QUESTION 659

System Restore

ANSWER

An operating system recovery tool introduced in Windows Me and improved in later versions of Windows. It creates restore points, which are snapshots of Windows, its configuration, and all installed programs.

QUESTION 660

systray

ANSWER

An area of the Windows taskbar used by programs and some hardware devices to display status icons. Also called thenotification area or system tray

QUESTION 661

T1

ANSWER

A level of service offered by the telephone companies over a T-carrier circuit that provides full-duplex transmissions at 1.544 Mbps, carrying digital voice, data, or video signals.

QUESTION 662

Tablet PC

ANSWER

A laptop in which the display is an integrated digitizer.

QUESTION 663

tape drive

ANSWER

A magnetic mass storage device primarily used for backing up data from computers.

QUESTION 664

Task Scheduler

ANSWER

A Windows utility that allows you to create tasks that run automatically at the times you select.

QUESTION 665

taskbar

ANSWER

In the Windows GUI, a horizontal bar normally positioned across the bottom of the desktop containing a Start button, the Quick Launch toolbar, buttons for running programs, and at the far right, the notification area. Sometimes called the Start Bar.

QUESTION 666

T-carrier system

ANSWER

A communications system, owned and operated by the telephone companies, that multiplexes voice and data signals onto digital transmission line.

QUESTION 667

TCP/IP

ANSWER

A network protocol suite originally developed for the Internet; it has been mostly adopted on private networks.

QUESTION 668

Telnet

ANSWER

A utility that provides remote terminal emulation for connecting to computers and network devices running server software that can respond, without needing to be concerned with the actual operating system running on either system.

QUESTION 669

Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP)

ANSWER

A protocol used with WPA wireless encryption that was broken by hackers.

QUESTION 670

terminal

ANSWER

At first, it was not much more than a display, a keyboard, and the minimal circuitry for connecting to the mainframe. Now, it can be a computer running Windows or other operating system, plus __ client emulation software that allows it to connect to a server in which a separate session is run for the client computer.

QUESTION 671

terminating resistor

ANSWER

A device installed at the end of a SCSI chain to absorb signals so they do not bounce back along the cable.

QUESTION 672

thermal compound

ANSWER

A special substance, also called thermal paste or heat sink compound, that increases the heat conductivity between a fan or heat sink and a chip.

QUESTION 673

thermal printer

ANSWER

A type of printer that uses heat in the image transfer process.

QUESTION 674

thermal wax transfer printer

ANSWER

A type of printer that uses a film coated with colored wax that melts onto paper. These printers are similar to dye-sublimation printers but differ in two major ways: the film contains wax rather than dye, and these printers do not require special paper.

QUESTION 675

thin-film transistor (TFT)

ANSWER

A technology for LCD displays in which transistors are positioned at each pixel.

QUESTION 676

thread

ANSWER

A portion of a program that can run separately from and concurrently with other portions of the program. Also called thread of execution.

QUESTION 677

thumb drive

ANSWER

A type of solid-state storage that is portable, about the size of a flattened thumb, and usually has a USB interface. Also called a flash drive or jump drive.

QUESTION 678

time to live (TTL)

ANSWER

In an IP packet, a value field that shows how many routers the packet can cross before being discarded.

QUESTION 679

toner

ANSWER

The medium for a laser printer, which is normally packaged within a toner cartridge.

QUESTION 680

toner cartridge

ANSWER

The cartridge for a laser printer that contains both the medium (toner) and other printing components.

QUESTION 681

top-level domain (TLD)

ANSWER

In the domain name system, a first-level domain, which is a suffix added to a registered domain name and separated from the domain name with a "dot" (.). Among the TLDs are .com, .gov, .edu, .org, .mil, .net, .biz, many two-lettered country codes, and several others.

QUESTION 682

touch screen

ANSWER

A type of display device that includes a touch-sensitive face to accept input from the user.

QUESTION 683

touchpad

ANSWER

A pointing device, often built into a laptop, which is a smooth rectangular panel over which you move your finger to move the pointer on the display.

QUESTION 684

TRACERT

ANSWER

A command-line utility, installed with the TCP/IP protocol suite, that traces the route taken by packets to a destination.

QUESTION 685

traces

ANSWER

The fine copper lines that are the electronic circuits through which power, data, and control signals travel on a circuit board.

QUESTION 686

track point

ANSWER

The generic term for a pointing stick.

QUESTION 687

TrackPoint

ANSWER

The IBM branded name for a pointing stick or track point.

QUESTION 688

transfer corona wire

ANSWER

In the laser printing process, a wire that passes a small positive charge to paper as it travels through the printer. This positive charge attracts the negatively charged toner particles on the drum to the paper.

QUESTION 689

transferring

ANSWER

In the laser printing process, the step in which the toner on the drum is transferred to the paper.

QUESTION 690

Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)

ANSWER

One of the two main protocols of the TCP/IP protocol suite, TCP breaks the data into chunks, called datagrams. Each datagram also contains information, stored in a header, which is used by the TCP protocol on the receiving end to reassemble the chunks of data into the original message.

QUESTION 691

transport layer security (TLS)

ANSWER

A data encryption technology used for securing data transmitted over the Internet. it succeeded SSL.

QUESTION 692

Trojan horse

ANSWER

A virus that gains access to a computer by masquerading as a harmless program that a user innocently installs on the computer.

QUESTION 693

troubleshooting

ANSWER

The act of discovering the cause of a problem and correcting it.

QUESTION 694

trusted platform module (TPM)

ANSWER

A TPM is a special microchip, installed on a motherboard, that stores passwords, keys, and digital certificates. Various services, such as BitLocker can store such security data in this chip.

QUESTION 695

TWAIN

ANSWER

A set of standards for imaging devices, such as scanners and cameras, that is used in drivers and other software for these devices.

QUESTION 696

twisted-pair cable

ANSWER

Cable that consists of pairs of wires twisted around each other. The twists help to boost each wire's signals and make them less susceptible to electromagnetic interference (EMI).

QUESTION 697

Type I

ANSWER

A card that fits into the PC Card interface, including both PC Card and CardBus cards. This type measures 85.6 millimeters long by 54 millimeters wide and 3.3 millimeters thick.

QUESTION 698

Type II

ANSWER

A card that fits into the PC Card interface, including both PC Card and CardBus cards. This type measures 85.6 millimeters long by 54 millimeters wide and 5.0 millimeters thick.

QUESTION 699

Type III

ANSWER

A card that fits into the PC Card interface, including both PC Card and CardBus cards. This type measures 85.6 millimeters long by 54 millimeters wide and measures 10.5 mm thick.

QUESTION 700

Ultra DMA (UDMA)

ANSWER

A technology used by hard drives to speed up data transfers by using DMA channels.

QUESTION 701

ultra-portable

ANSWER

The smallest laptop type, weighing less than 3 pounds. See also netbook and mini-notebook.

QUESTION 702

unattended installation

ANSWER

An automated software installation that does not require a person be present to respond to prompts for information

QUESTION 703

unidirectional mode

ANSWER

In reference to parallel ports, a mode in which the parallel device connected to the parallel port can receive data but cannot send data. CMOS settings (system settings) may refer to this mode as "Transfer only."

QUESTION 704

uninterruptible power supply (UPS)

ANSWER

An online power protection device that isolates a computer or other device plugged into it. During normal operation, the devices run directly off the battery through an inverter, rather than switching to the battery only after a loss of power.

QUESTION 705

uniqueness database file (UDF)

ANSWER

A file used with a scripted unattended installation along with an answer file.It provides settings that are unique for each computer.

QUESTION 706

universal asynchronous receiver/transmitter (UART)

ANSWER

A chip that works with a serial port, converting outgoing data from parallel to serial and incoming data from serial to parallel.

QUESTION 707

universal data format (UDF)

ANSWER

A file format for movie DVDs.

QUESTION 708

Universal Serial Bus (USB)

ANSWER

An external bus that connects into the PC's PCI bus. you can theoretically connect up to 127 devices to your computer.

QUESTION 709

update

ANSWER

In Microsoft terminology, software that contains one or more software fixes or changes to the operating system.

QUESTION 710

User Account Control (UAC)

ANSWER

A security feature introduced in Windows Vista to prevent unauthorized changes to Windows.

QUESTION 711

User Datagram Protocol (UDP)

ANSWER

A subprotocol of TCP/IP used for connectionless communications in which each packet is sent without establishing a connection.

QUESTION 712

User State Migration Tool (USMT)

ANSWER

A utility for migrating data from many computers, or if you need to perform what Microsoft calls a "wipe-and-load migration" from and to the same computer. Available in Windows XP, Vista, and Windows 7.

QUESTION 713

UXGA

ANSWER

Ultra extended graphics array, a video graphics mode with a maximum resolution of 1600 × 1200.

QUESTION 714

value entry

ANSWER

The settings within a registry key.

QUESTION 715

version

ANSWER

A new level of an operating system with major changes to the core components.

QUESTION 716

vertical position

ANSWER

An LCD display setting that adjusts the viewable area of the display vertically.

QUESTION 717

VGA Mode

ANSWER

A video mode that most often consists of a combination of 640 × 480 pixels display resolution and 16 colors. It can produce around 16 million different colors, but can display only up to 256 different colors at a time.

QUESTION 718

v-hold

ANSWER

A CRT video setting, also known as vertical hold, that holds the image vertically on the screen.

QUESTION 719

video adapter

ANSWER

Circuitry in a PC on an adapter card, or directly on the motherboard, that controls the output from the PC to the display device.

QUESTION 720

video adapter card

ANSWER

A circuit card in a PC that controls the output to the display device(s).

QUESTION 721

Video Electronics Standards Organization (VESA)

ANSWER

An organization that created several PC standards, including the VGA connector.

QUESTION 722

VGA

ANSWER

An obsolete video standard introduced with IBM PS/2 computers in the late 1980s.It had a maximum resolution of 720 × 400 in text mode and 640 × 480 in graphics mode.

QUESTION 723

video RAM (VRAM)

ANSWER

A specialized type of memory used only with video adapters.

QUESTION 724

virtual circuit (VC) A

ANSWER

communication service provided over a telecommunications network or computer network. A VC logically resembles a circuit while passing over a complex routed or switched network, such as the phone company's frame relay network.

QUESTION 725

virtual file allocation table (VFAT)

ANSWER

A modified version of FAT12 and FAT16 used in Windows since Windows 95.

QUESTION 726

virtual memory

ANSWER

The use by the operating system of a portion of hard disk as memory.

QUESTION 727

VPN

ANSWER

A virtual tunnel created between two endpoints over an untrusted network. The tunnel is created by encapsulating the packets within special packets for the tunnel

QUESTION 728

virus

ANSWER

A program installed and activated on a computer without the user's knowledge or permission. At the least, the intent is mischief, but most often the intent is to cause damage.

QUESTION 729

virus encyclopedia

ANSWER

A generic term for a collection of information on known malware (not just viruses).

QUESTION 730

VoIP

ANSWER

A set of technologies that allow voice transmission over an IP network—specifically used for placing phone calls over the Internet—rather than the public switched telephone network (PSTN), the worldwide network that carries traditional voice traffic.

QUESTION 731

volatile

ANSWER

A word used to describe memory that cannot work without a steady supply of power.

QUESTION 732

voltage regulator module (VRM)

ANSWER

A circuit on a motherboard through which incoming power passes. Several voltage regulators maintain a steady voltage as demand goes up and down, with one or more voltage regulators for the various voltages required (5 volts, 12 volts, 3.3 volts, etc.).

QUESTION 733

volts

ANSWER

A measurement of the pressure of electrons, the electromotive force. It is calculated by the formula volts = watts / amps.

QUESTION 734

volume

ANSWER

The term used for dynamic space allocation that can be formatted with a file system.

QUESTION 735

war chalking

ANSWER

A mark on a building created by a war driver to specify where a hotspot exists. People "in the know" look for these marks to identify hotspots for their use.

QUESTION 736

war driving

ANSWER

The act of moving through a neighborhood in a vehicle or on foot, using either a laptop equipped with Wi-Fi wireless network capability or a simple Wi-Fi sensor available for a few dollars from many sources. War drivers are searching for open hotspots—areas where a Wi-Fi network connects to the Internet without using security to keep out intruders.

QUESTION 737

watts

ANSWER

A unit of measurement of actual delivered power, calculated by the formula watts = volts × amps.

QUESTION 738

Web browser

ANSWER

Client software for browsing and accessing the content on the World Wide Web. Examples include Internet Explorer and Firefox.

QUESTION 739

WAN

ANSWER

A network connection over long distances, traditionally using phone lines or satellite communications.

QUESTION 740

Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA)

ANSWER

A wireless data encryption standard based on the IEEE 802.11i security standard. It issues keys per-user and per-session and includes encryption key integrity checking. It uses Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP).

QUESTION 741

Wi-Fi Protected Access 2 (WPA2)

ANSWER

An improved version of WPA that does not support older network cards and offers both secure authentication and data encryption. It uses EAP for a variety of authentication methods—most often EAP-PSK.

QUESTION 742

Windows Easy Transfer (WET)

ANSWER

The utility to use when doing a single data and settings transfer to a new Windows Vista computer from one running Windows XP or Windows Vista

QUESTION 743

Windows Explorer

ANSWER

The EXPLORER.EXE program. This program supports the entire Windows GUI. If EXPLORER.EXE is called up from inside the GUI, it opens a window for browsing your local disks and files.

QUESTION 744

Windows Internet Naming Service (WINS)

ANSWER

A service that manages Microsoft NetBIOS names for a Windows network. This service is becoming obsolete, as Windows has moved to DNS for naming and name service.

QUESTION 745

Windows Update

ANSWER

A Windows program that launches Internet Explorer and connects to the Windows Update Website

QUESTION 746

Windows Update Website

ANSWER

The Microsoft Website from which you can download updates to Windows.

QUESTION 747

Windows XP Files and Settings Transfer Wizard

ANSWER

A tool for migrating user data and settings from one Windows computer to a computer running Windows XP.

QUESTION 748

WINS Server

ANSWER

A Windows server running the WINS service to maintain and resolve NetBIOS names.

QUESTION 749

Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP)

ANSWER

The oldest of the Wi-Fi encryption standards. It uses 64- or 128-bit encryption that is easily broken. It does not encrypt the actual data in a packet, and it does not perform user authentication on a packet.

QUESTION 750

wireless access point (WAP)

ANSWER

A network connection device at the core of a wireless network.

QUESTION 751

Wi-Fi

ANSWER

Local area networking using radio waves that includes several implementations based on the IEEE 802.11 group of standards.

QUESTION 752

WLAN

ANSWER

Local area networking using radio waves, with the most common based on the IEEE 802.11 group of standards (802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g, and 802.11n).

QUESTION 753

workgroup

ANSWER

A term used by Microsoft for a peer-to-peer network in which each computer can be either a client or a server or both.

QUESTION 754

World Wide Web

ANSWER

The graphical Internet consisting of a vast array of documents located on millions of specialized servers worldwide. The documents are created using HTML and other specialized languages, and transferred from servers to client computers using HTTP and related transport protocols.

QUESTION 755

worm

ANSWER

A virus that is self-replicating.

QUESTION 756

WRAM

ANSWER

Video RAM memory that uses a technique for using video RAM to perform Windows-specific functions to speed up the OS.

QUESTION 757

writing

ANSWER

In the laser printing process, the step in which the laser beam creates a negative of the image that will eventually appear on the printout. Each place that the laser beam touches loses most of its charge, creating an image, whereas the rest of the drum remains highly negatively charged.

QUESTION 758

WUXGA

ANSWER

a widescreen video graphics mode with a maximum resolution of 1920 × 1200.

QUESTION 759

x86

ANSWER

A term applied to a CPU, motherboard, or other components that conform to the Intel 32-bit x86 specification. Also referred to as 32-bit.

QUESTION 760

x86-64

ANSWER

A term applied to a CPU, motherboard, or other components that conform to the newer 64-bit architecture. Also referred to as 64-bit.

QUESTION 761

XGA

ANSWER

A video mode with a maximum graphics resolution of 1024 × 768.

QUESTION 762

Y

ANSWER

Used to represent the luminance signal in S-Video.

QUESTION 763

ZIF socket

ANSWER

A socket for a PGA CPU that has a retention lever as well as contacts to match the number of pins on the CPU. The lever is used to attach the CPU to the socket in a manner that does not require force to insert or to remove the CPU.

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