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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.
A tool without a graphical user interface, typically used in the command-line environment.
Industry:Software; Computer
A script object that inherits properties and handlers from another object, called the parent.
Industry:Software; Computer
In PackageMaker, a test that compares the value of a system property (such as the amount of random-access memory available) with a value. Choice requirements determine the value of a choice’s user-interface properties: selected, actionable, and visible.
Industry:Software; Computer
A data structure that stores a block of data that specifies such things as vertex coordinates, texture coordinates, surface normals, RGBA colors, color indices, and edge flags.
Industry:Software; Computer
Attributes that specify how the lines of text associated with the text layout object are displayed and formatted. Line attributes control an individual line of text; layout attributes control all of the text associated with a text layout object.
Industry:Software; Computer
Performance characterized by guaranteed worst-case response times.
Industry:Software; Computer
(1) The computer that is running (is host to) a particular program or service. The term is usually used to refer to a computer on a network. (2) In debugging, the computer that is running the debugger itself. In this context, the target is the machine running the application, kernel, or driver being debugged.
Industry:Software; Computer
The area of a PackageMaker project window that allows packagers to specify a choice requirement (and how it affects the value of the choice’s user-interface properties). See also choice requirement.
Industry:Software; Computer
Advanced Encryption Standard encryption. A Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS), described in FIPS publication 197. AES has been adopted by the US government for the protection of sensitive, nonclassified information. The algorithm was developed by Dr. Joan Daemen and Dr. Vincent Rijmen and was named the Rijndael algorithm. It is a symmetric-key algorithm that can use key sizes of 128, 192, or 256 bits. Apple has adopted the 128-bit version of AES for FileVault. There are approximately 3.4 x 10**38 possible 128-bit keys.
Industry:Software; Computer
See SMP.
Industry:Software; Computer