Large Installation Systems Administration - Definition. Was ist Large Installation Systems Administration
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Was (wer) ist Large Installation Systems Administration - definition

SYLLABLE REPERTOIRE OF B5900, B6500, B7500 AND SUCCESSORS
Burroughs large systems instruction Set; Burroughs large systems instruction set; Burroughs large systems instruction sets

Large Installation Systems Administration      
(LISA) The USENIX systems administration conference. It is now more general that its title suggests. It is sponsored and organised by SAGE, the USENIX Systems Administrators Guild. ftp://ftp.sage.usenix.org/pub/sage/. (1996-01-02)
Remote Installation Services         
MICROSOFT WINDOWS SERVICE THAT ALLOWS A REMOTE SERVER TO ACT AS A CUSTOM INSTALLATION DISK
Remote Installation; Remote Installation Server
RIS, Remote Installation Services is a Microsoft-supplied server that allows PXE BIOS-enabled computers to remotely execute boot environment variables.
Administration (government)         
GOVERNMENT OR POLITICAL ORGANIZATION
US administration; Presidential Administration; Government administration; Governmental administration; Administration (United States); Administration (US); United States Administration; Administration of the United States
The term administration, as used in the context of government, differs according to the jurisdiction under which it operates. In general terms, administration can be described as a decision making body.

Wikipedia

Burroughs B6x00-7x00 instruction set

The Burroughs B6x00-7x00 instruction set includes the set of valid operations for the Burroughs B6500, B7500 and later Burroughs large systems, including the current (as of 2006) Unisys Clearpath/MCP systems; it does not include the instruction for other Burroughs large systems including the B5000, B5500, B5700 and the B8500. These unique machines have a distinctive design and instruction set. Each word of data is associated with a type, and the effect of an operation on that word can depend on the type. Further, the machines are stack based to the point that they had no user-addressable registers.