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Apple Inc.
Industry: Computer; Software
Number of terms: 54848
Number of blossaries: 7
Company Profile:
Apple Inc., formerly Apple Computer, Inc., is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Cupertino, California, that designs, develops, and sells consumer electronics, computer software and personal computers.
Slang for copying an image from memory to the screen.
Industry:Software; Computer
In audio, extracting and reconstructing timing information from a data stream.
Industry:Software; Computer
A development environment and application framework that combines features from AppleScript, Xcode, Interface Builder, and the Cocoa application framework to provide a sophisticated environment for creating AppleScript Studio applications.
Industry:Software; Computer
In Xcode, a mode of the Documentation window in which you can traverse a hierarchy of categories in a documentation set until you get to a list of documents. Compare search mode.
Industry:Software; Computer
The set of objects responsible for handling events in a window.
Industry:Software; Computer
A control that displays information. Typically placards are used in document windows as a way to quickly modify the view of the contents—for example, to change the current page or the magnification.
Industry:Software; Computer
In QuickTime, the data in a tween track, such as interpolation values.
Industry:Software; Computer
Computer menu common to most file-handling computer programs with a GUI (Graphical User Interface). It appears as the first item in the menu bar and contains commands relating to the handling of files, such as open, save, print, etc. In some operating systems, it also offers commands for closing windows and exiting the current program.
Industry:Software; Computer
A QuickTime movie file that stores both the movie data and the movie resource in the data fork of the movie file. You can use single-fork movie files to ease the exchange of QuickTime movie data between Macintosh computers and other computer systems.
Industry:Software; Computer
Signal-correlated noise resulting from rounding errors when quantizing a series of data samples. Application of a dither signal during analog-to-digital conversion can decorrelate quantization noise from the signal. The perceptual result is low-amplitude noise instead of distortion.
Industry:Software; Computer