Portable Tool Interface - significado y definición. Qué es Portable Tool Interface
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Qué (quién) es Portable Tool Interface - definición

PORTABLE COMPUTER BY APPLE
Apple Macintosh Portable; Mac Portable; Macintosh portable

Portable Tool Interface      
<programming, standard> (PTI) A standard such as PCTE, allowing interworking between different software tools via defined interfaces to the user and to the repository or object management system. (2000-09-25)
lachrymology         
  • Sober]]" music video, directed by Adam Jones and Fred Stuhr
  • A band logo created by longtime collaborator [[Cam de Leon]],<ref name="Lowe Law 2006" /> this wrench is an example of "[[phallic]] hardware" in Tool's imagery.<ref name="Buffalo News 1997" />
  • Tool live, in 2006
  • Tool's live performances in 2006 included an elaborate light show using ''10,000 Days'' artwork by painter [[Alex Grey]] as a backdrop.
  • Tool logo, 2006
AMERICAN ROCK BAND
Tool band; Lachrymology; Lacrymology; Tool the band; Toolband; Paul d'Amour; Tool 2011 Tour; Tool tours; Tool Winter Tour; Tool 2013 Tour; Tool 2014 Tour; Decem; Decem (album); Decem (Tool album); Evolution (Tool album); Toolband.com
the science of crying as a therapy
Tool seemed to make up the theory of lachrymology.
Interface (computing)         
  • USB]]-B socket.
CONCEPT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE; POINT OF INTERACTION BETWEEN TWO THINGS
Interfaces (computer science); Interface pattern; Interface (programming); Computer interface; Subinterface; Software Interface; Software interface; Interface Pattern; Interface (software); Interface (Software); Interface (computer science); Function call interface
In computing, an interface is a shared boundary across which two or more separate components of a computer system exchange information. The exchange can be between software, computer hardware, peripheral devices, humans, and combinations of these.

Wikipedia

Macintosh Portable

The Macintosh Portable is a laptop designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Computer, Inc. from September 1989 to October 1991. It is the first battery-powered Macintosh, which garnered significant excitement from critics, but sales to customers were quite low. It featured a fast, sharp, and expensive monochrome active matrix LCD screen in a hinged design that covered the keyboard when the machine was not in use. The Portable was one of the early consumer laptops to employ an active matrix panel—only the most expensive of the initial PowerBook line, the PowerBook 170, had such a panel. The machine was designed to deliver high performance, at the cost of increased price and weight. The Portable was discontinued in October 1991.

The Portable has features similar to the Atari STacy, a version of their Atari ST computer which contained a built in keyboard and monitor. Macintosh Portable can run Macintosh System 6.0.4 through System 7.5.5.