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Encyclopedia of computer science and technology / Harry PDF

593 Pages·2008·8.78 MB·English
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EncyclopEdia of computEr sciEncE and tEchnology Revised edition haRRy hendeRson In memory of my brother, Bruce Henderson, who gave me my first opportunity to explore personal computing almost 30 years ago. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, Revised Edition Copyright © 2009, 2004, 2003 by Harry Henderson All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher. For information contact: Facts On File, Inc. An imprint of Infobase Publishing 132 West 31st Street New York NY 10001 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Henderson, Harry, 1951– Encyclopedia of computer science and technology / Harry Henderson.—Rev. ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-8160-6382-6 ISBN-10: 0-8160-6382-6 1. Computer science—Encyclopedias. 2. Computers—Encyclopedias. I. Title. QA76.15.H43 2008 004.03—dc22 2008029156 Facts On File books are available at special discounts when purchased in bulk quantities for businesses, associations, institutions, or sales promotions. Please call our Special Sales Department in New York at (212) 967-8800 or (800) 322-8755. You can find Facts On File on the World Wide Web at http://www.factsonfile.com Text design by Erika K. Arroyo Cover design by Salvatore Luongo lllustrations by Sholto Ainslie Photo research by Tobi Zausner, Ph.D. Printed in the United States of America VB Hermitage 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 This book is printed on acid-free paper and contains 30 percent postconsumer recycled content. c on t E n t s ACKNOWLEDgmENTS iv INTRODUCTION TO THE REVISED EDITION v A–Z ENTRIES 1 APPENDIx I Bibliographies and Web Resources 527 APPENDIx II A Chronology of Computing 529 APPENDIx III Some Significant Awards 542 APPENDIx IV Computer-Related Organizations 553 INDEx 555 a c k no w l E d g m E n t s Iw ish to acknowledge with gratitude the patient and thorough management of this project by my editor, Frank K. Darmstadt. I can scarcely count the times he has given me encouragement and nudges as needed. I also wish to thank Tobi Zausner, Ph.D., for her ability and efficiency in obtaining many of the photos for this book. iv i n t r od u c t ion to t h E r E v i s E d E d i t i on Chances are that you use at least one computer or com- The book’s philosophy is that because computer tech- puter-related device on a daily basis. Some are obvi- nology is now inextricably woven into our everyday lives, ous: for example, the personal computer on your desk or at anyone seeking to understand its impact must not only your school, the laptop, the PDA that may be in your brief- know how the bits flow, but also how the industry works case. Other devices may be a bit less obvious: the “smart” and where it may be going in the years to come. cell phone, the iPod, a digital camera, and other essentially specialized computers, communications systems, and data New aNd eNhaNced coverage storage systems. Finally, there are the “hidden” computers The need for a revised edition of this encyclopedia becomes found in so many of today’s consumer products—such as clear when one considers the new products, technologies, the ones that provide stability control, braking assistance, and issues that have appeared in just a few years. (Consider and navigation in newer cars. that at the start of the 2000 decade, Ajax was still only a Computers not only seem to be everywhere, but also cleaning product and blog was not even a word.) are part of so many activities of daily life. They bring The revised edition includes almost 180 new entries, together willing sellers and buyers on eBay, allow you including new programming languages (such as C# and to buy a book with a click on the Amazon.com Web site, Ruby), software development and Web design technologies and of course put a vast library of information (of vary- (such as the aforementioned Ajax, and Web services), and ing quality) at your fingertips via the World Wide Web. expanded coverage of Linux and other open-source soft- Behind the scenes, inventory and payroll systems keep ware. There are also entries for key companies in software, businesses running, track shipments, and more problem- hardware, and Web commerce and services. atically, keep track of where people go and what they many other new entries reflect new ways of using infor- buy. Indeed, the infrastructure of modern society, from mation technology and important social issues that arise water treatment plants to power grids to air-traffic con- from such use, including the following: trol, depends on complex software and systems. modern science would be inconceivable without com- • blogging and newer forms of online communication puters to gather data and run models and simulations. that are influencing journalism and political cam- Whether bringing back pictures of the surface of mars or paigns detailed images to guide brain surgeons, computers have • other ways for users to create and share content, such greatly extended our knowledge of the world around us and as file-sharing networks and YouTube our ability to turn ideas into engineering reality. The revised edition of the Facts On File Encyclopedia of • new ways to share and access information, such as Computer Science and Technology provides overviews and the popular Wikipedia important facts about these and dozens of other applica- • the ongoing debate over who should pay for Internet tions of computer technology. There are also many entries access, and whether service providers or governments dealing with the fundamental concepts underlying com- should be able to control the Web’s content puter design and programming, the Internet, and other topics such as the economic and social impacts of the infor- • the impact of surveillance and data mining on privacy mation society. and civil liberties v vi    Introduction to the Revised Edition • threats to data security, ranging from identity thieves This book can also be useful to obtain an overview of and “phishers” to stalkers and potential “cyberterror- particular areas in computing by reading groups of related ists” entries. The following listing groups the entries by cat- egory. • the benefits and risks of social networking sites (such as mySpace) AI and Robotics • the impact of new technology on women and minori- artificial intelligence ties, young people, the disabled, and other groups artificial life Other entries feature new or emerging technology, such Bayesian analysis as Breazeal, Cynthia Brooks, Rodney • portable media devices (the iPod and its coming suc- cellular automata cessors) chess and computers • home media centers and the gradual coming of the cognitive science long-promised “smart house” computer vision Dreyfus, Hubert L. • navigation and mapping systems (and their integra- Engelberger, Joseph tion with e-commerce) expert systems • how computers are changing the way cars, appliances, Feigenbaum, Edward and even telephones work fuzzy logic genetic algorithms • “Web 2.0”—and beyond handwriting recognition Finally, we look at the farther reaches of the imagina- iRobot Corporation tion, considering such topics as knowledge representation Kurzweil, Raymond C. • nanotechnology Lanier, Jaron • quantum computing maes, Pattie mcCarthy, John • science fiction and computing minsky, marvin Lee • philosophical and spiritual aspects of computing mIT media Lab natural language processing • the ultimate “technological singularity” neural interfaces In addition to the many new entries, all existing entries neural network have been carefully reviewed and updated to include the Papert, Seymour latest facts and trends. pattern recognition robotics gettiNg the Most out of this Book singularity, technological software agent This encyclopedia can be used in several ways: for example, speech recognition and synthesis you can look up specific entries by referring from topics in telepresence the index, or simply by browsing. The nearly 600 entries Weizenbaum, Joseph in this book are intended to read like “mini-essays,” giving not just the bare definition of a topic, but also developing its Business and E-Commerce Applications significance for the use of computers and its relationship to other topics. Related topics are indicated by small capital Amazon.com letteRs. At the end of each entry is a list of books, articles, America Online (AOL) and/or Web sites for further exploration of the topic. application service provider (ASP) Every effort has been made to make the writing acces- application software sible to a wide range of readers: high school and college application suite students, computer science students, working computer auctions, online professionals, and adults who wish to be better informed auditing in data processing about computer-related topics and issues. banking and computers The appendices provide further information for refer- Bezos, Jeffrey P. ence and exploration. They include a chronology of sig- Brin, Sergey nificant events in computing; a listing of achievements in business applications of computers computing as recognized in major awards; an additional Craigslist bibliography to supplement that given with the entries; customer relationship management (CRm) and finally, brief descriptions and contact information for decision support system some important organizations in the computer field. desktop publishing (DTP) Introduction to the Revised Edition    vii enterprise computing certification of computer professionals google Cisco Systems groupware compatibility and portability home office computer industry management information system (mIS) Dell, Inc. middleware education in the computer field office automation employment in the computer field Omidyar, Pierre entrepreneurs in computing online advertising gates, William III (Bill) online investing grove, Andrew online job searching and recruiting IBm optical character recognition (OCR) Intel Corporation Page, Larry journalism and the computer industry PDF (Portable Document Format) marketing of software personal health information management microsoft Corporation personal information manager (PIm) moore, gordon E. presentation software motorola Corporation project management software research laboratories in computing smart card standards in computing spreadsheet Sun microsystems supply chain management Wozniak, Steven systems analyst Computer Science Fundamentals telecommuting text editor Church, Alonzo transaction processing computer science trust and reputation systems computability and complexity word processing cybernetics Yahoo! hexadecimal system information theory Computer Architecture mathematics of computing addressing measurement units used in computing arithmetic logic unit (ALU) Turing, Alan mathison bits and bytes von Neumann, John buffering Wiener, Norbert bus Computer Security and Risks cache computer engineering authentication concurrent programming backup and archive systems cooperative processing biometrics Cray, Seymour computer crime and security device driver computer forensics distributed computing computer virus embedded system copy protection grid computing counterterrorism and computers parallel port cyberstalking and harassment reduced instruction set computer (RISC) cyberterrorism serial port Diffie, Bailey Whitfield supercomputer disaster planning and recovery USB (Universal Serial Bus) encryption fault tolerance Computer Industry firewall Adobe Systems hackers and hacking Advanced micro Devices (AmD) identity theft Amdahl, gene myron information warfare Apple Corporation mitnick, Kevin D. Bell, C. gordon online frauds and scams Bell Laboratories phishing and spoofing benchmark RFID (radio frequency identification) viii    Introduction to the Revised Edition risks of computing class Spafford, Eugene H. constants and literals spam data spyware and adware data abstraction Y2K Problem data structures data types Databases enumerations and sets CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture) heap (data structure) data conversion Knuth, Donald data dictionary list processing data mining numeric data data security operators and expressions data warehouse sorting and searching database administration stack database management system (DBmS) tree database variable hashing Development of Computers information retrieval Oracle Corporation Aiken, Howard SAP analog and digital SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol) analog computer SQL Atanasoff, John Vincent Babbage, Charles Data Communications and Networking calculator (General) Eckert, J. Presper bandwidth history of computing Bluetooth Hollerith, Hermann broadband mauchly, John William cable modem mainframe client-server computing minicomputer data acquisition Zuse, Konrad data communications Future Computing data compression DSL (digital subscriber line) bioinformation error correction Dertouzos, michael fiber optics Joy, Bill file server molecular computing file transfer protocols nanotechnology FireWire quantum computing local area network (LAN) trends and emerging technologies modem ubiquitous computing network Games, Graphics, and Media satellite Internet service Shannon, Claude E animation, computer synchronous/asynchronous operation art and the computer telecommunications bitmapped image terminal codec Wifi color in computing wireless computing computer games computer graphics Data Types and Algorithms digital rights management (DRm) algorithm DVR (digital video recording) array Electronic Arts binding film industry and computing bitwise operations font Boolean operators fractals in computing branching statements game consoles characters and strings graphics card Introduction to the Revised Edition    ix graphics formats domain name system (DNS) graphics tablet eBay image processing e-books and digital libraries media center, home e-commerce multimedia e-mail music and video distribution, online file-sharing and P2P networks music and video players, digital flash and smart mob music, computer HTmL, DHTmL, and xHTmL online gambling hypertext and hypermedia online games Internet photography, digital Internet applications programming podcasting Internet cafes and “hot spots” PostScript Internet organization and governance RSS (real simple syndication) Internet radio RTF (Rich Text Format) Internet service provider (ISP) sound file formats Kleinrock, Leonard streaming (video or audio) Licklider, J. C. R. Sutherland, Ivan Edward mashups video editing, digital Netiquette YouTube netnews and newsgroups online research Hardware Components online services CD-ROm and DVD-ROm portal flash drive Rheingold, Howard flat-panel display search engine floppy disk semantic Web hard disk social networking keyboard TCP/IP monitor texting and instant messaging motherboard user-created content networked storage videoconferencing optical computing virtual community printers Wales, Jimmy punched cards and paper tape Web 2.0 and beyond RAID (redundant array of inexpensive disks) Web browser scanner Web cam tape drives Web filter Webmaster Internet and World Wide Web Web page design active server pages (ASP) Web server Ajax (Asynchronous JavaScript and xmL) Web services Andreessen, marc wikis and Wikipedia Berners-Lee, Tim World Wide Web blogs and blogging xmL bulletin board systems (BBS) Operating Systems Bush, Vannevar cascading style sheets (CSS) demon Cerf, Vinton g. emulation certificate, digital file CgI (common gateway interface) input/output (I/O) chat, online job control language chatterbots kernel conferencing systems Linux content management memory cookies memory management Cunningham, Howard (Ward) message passing cyberspace and cyber culture microsoft windows digital cash (e-commerce) mS-DOS digital convergence multiprocessing

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Ajax for Dummies. Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley, 2006. Jacobs, Sas. Beginning XML with DOM and Ajax: From Novice to. Professional. Berkeley, Calif.: Apress, 2006.
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