| k |
- Abbreviation for the prefix kilo-, meaning one thousand. 2. Kilobyte. One thousand bytes (103) or 1024 (210) bytes. A unit of measurement used for computer file sizes. 2. Okay (chat).
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| K |
- A unit of measurement of computer storage capacity, 2^10 or 1024. 2. Kelvin, a unit of thermodynamic temperature.
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| k12 |
Top-level newsgroup category for an elementary and secondary education newsgroup.
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| ka- kichen assistant |
a person who asists in the kichen giveing a hand in a task ,and use thier abilities of the job and delivering food or transporting food carts and is below and under an team leader does not have authority over staff , but can make sugestions and can report it to higer up's in staffing ,and cab help out the team leader. and can try to make under standings for other staff with out the authority.
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| KA9Q |
An implementation of TCP/IP and related protocols for amateur packet radio.
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| Kaleida Labs, Inc. |
A joint project by IBM and Apple Computer for developing multimedia software.
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| kana |
Japanese phonetic writing, which includes the two styles of hiragana and katakana. In Japanese books, kana is mixed with kanji, the whole-word symbols derived from Chinese. On computers, the phonetic symbols of kana are more often used.
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| kangaroo code |
A clumsily-written, disorganized computer program created by a novice.
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| kanji |
A character set of symbols used in Japanese ideographic alphabets. Each character requires 2 bytes to represent it.
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| katakana |
A character set of symbols used in one of the two principal Japanese phonetic alphabets, mainly used for phonetic transliteration of foreign words. Each character uses two bytes.
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| Katmai New Instructions |
(KNI). The code name for MMX2 instructions.
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| KB |
Kilobyte. One thousand bytes (103) or 1024 (210) bytes. A unit of measurement used for computer file sizes.
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| Kb |
- Kilobit. One thousand bits (103) or 1024 bits (210). A unit of measurement of the capacity of memory integrated circuits. Not to be confused with kilobyte. 2. Sometimes used for kilobyte. One thousand bytes (103) or 1024 (210) bytes. A unit of measurement used for computer file sizes.
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| Kbit, K-bit, or kbit |
Kilobit. One thousand bits (103) or 1024 bits (210). A unit of measurement of the capacity of memory integrated circuits. Not to be confused with kilobyte.
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| Kbits/sec |
Kilobits per second. Thousand bits per second.
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| KBps |
Kilobytes per second. Thousand bytes per second.
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| Kbps |
- Kilobits per second. Thousand bits per second. A data transfer rate.
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| Kbs |
Kilobits per second. Thousand bits per second.
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| KBS |
Knowledge-Based System. A computer system that is programmed to imitate human problem-solving by means of artificial intelligence and reference to a database of knowledge on a particular subject.
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| Kbyte or K-byte |
Kilobyte. One thousand bytes (103) or 1024 (210) bytes. A unit of measurement used for computer file sizes.
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| Kbytes/sec |
Kilobytes per second. Thousand bytes per second.
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| KDE |
This is an acronym for K Desktop Enviornment; it is a open source graphical desktop enviornment for Unix workstations. It is easy to use with contemporary functions and outstanding graphical design.
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| Kenneth Iverson |
Dr. Kenneth Iverson developed a programming language, J, which can be accessed from any ASCII keyboard and display. It was developed with the help of Roger Hui. Copies can be download at ftp://watserv1.uwaterloo.ca/languages/j/. Dr. Iverson created J as a means to introduce both mathematics and programming. He is the author of books that outline these methods.
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| Kerberos |
The security system for MIT's Project Athena.
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| Kermit |
A file transfer and terminal emulation program from Columbia University. Kermit can transfer text and binary files on many different computer platforms.
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