- Industry: Computer
- Number of terms: 98482
- Number of blossaries: 0
- Company Profile:
Sometimes referred to as “Big Blue” IBM is a multinational corporation headquartered in Armonk, New York. It manufactures computer hardware and software and provides information technology and services.
A special case of function shipping, in which CICS sends a DL/I request to another CICS system.
Industry:Software
A sandwich layer that links the Wireless Application Environment (WAE) to two session services: one connection-oriented, operating above the Wireless Transaction Protocol, the other connectionless, operating above the Wireless Datagram Protocol.
Industry:Software
A scheduled evaluation of system data that detects and signals parametric degradation which might lead to functional failures.
Industry:Software
A scriptable framework for doing byte-code insertion to probe the workings of a target program. See also probe.
Industry:Software
A scripted HTML file that has a .jsp extension and allows for the inclusion of dynamic content in Web pages. A JSP file can be directly requested as a URL, called by a servlet, or called from within an HTML page. See also JavaServer Pages, JSP page.
Industry:Software
A scripting language for the Java environment that is used to create Web content and to control Java applications.
Industry:Software
A scripting language that was originally designed as a tool for writing programmes in the UNIX environment but has evolved to include the power and flexibility of a high-level programming language such as C. Perl is an open-source language.
Industry:Software
A search in which one or more search terms are combined by using operators such as AND, NOT, and OR.
Industry:Software
A second version of the LPDA command set. In addition to most of the functions of LPDA-1, LPDA-2 also supports modem configuration commands, a call out (dial) command, a set transmit speed command, and commands to operate a contact that controls external devices.
Industry:Software
A secondary data field in a chart. In a line chart, typically the Y fields appear along the vertical axis. For example, an Y field can represent resources whose costs are represented along the vertical axis of the chart.
Industry:Software