rivulet$70879$ - translation to german
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rivulet$70879$ - translation to german

CONGREGATIONALIST MINISTER AT WHITEFIELD'S TABERNACLE IN LONDON
John Campbell (London clergyman); Rivulet controversy
  • Duff]]'' missionary vessel, engraving from ''Maritime Discovery and Christian Missions'' by John Campbell
  • John Campbell, mid-century engraving

rivulet      
n. Flüßchen, Bach

Definition

stream
1. <communications> An abstraction referring to any flow of data from a source (or sender, producer) to a single sink (or receiver, consumer). A stream usually flows through a channel of some kind, as opposed to packets which may be addressed and routed independently, possibly to multiple recipients. Streams usually require some mechanism for establishing a channel or a "connection" between the sender and receiver. 2. <programming> In the C language's buffered input/ouput library functions, a stream is associated with a file or device which has been opened using fopen. Characters may be read from (written to) a stream without knowing their actual source (destination) and buffering is provided transparently by the library routines. 3. <operating system> Confusingly, Sun have called their modular device driver mechanism "STREAMS". 4. <operating system> In IBM's AIX operating system, a stream is a full-duplex processing and data transfer path between a driver in kernel space and a process in {user space}. [IBM AIX 3.2 Communication Programming Concepts, SC23-2206-03]. 5. <communications> streaming. 6. <programming> lazy list. (1996-11-06)

Wikipedia

John Campbell (19th-century minister)

John Campbell (1795 – 1867) was a Scottish Congregationalist minister at the Moorfields Tabernacle in London. He was the second successor there of George Whitefield, the Calvinistic Methodist. He founded and edited religious magazines and journals, including the Christian Witness and the British Banner.