replication - significado y definición. Qué es replication
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Qué (quién) es replication - definición

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Replication (disambiguation)

replication         
n.
1.
Answer, reply, response.
2.
Rejoinder.
3.
Repetition.
4.
Copy, portrait.
Replication         
·noun An answer; a reply.
II. Replication ·noun A repetition; a copy.
III. Replication ·noun Return or repercussion, as of sound; echo.
IV. Replication ·noun The reply of the plaintiff, in matters of fact, to the defendant's plea.
replication         
<database, networking> Creating and maintaining a duplicate copy of a database or file system on a different computer, typically a server. The term usually implies the intelligent copying of parts of the source database which have changed since the last replication with the destination. Replication may be one-way or two-way. Two-way replication is much more complicated because of the possibility that a replicated object may have been updated differently in the two locations in which case some method is needed to reconcile the different versions. For example, Lotus Notes can automatically distribute document databases across telecommunications networks. Notes supports a wide range of network protocols including X25 and Internet TCP/IP. Compare mirror. See also rdist. (1997-12-12)

Wikipedia

Replication

Replication may refer to:

Ejemplos de pronunciación para replication
1. clonal replication.
New California Wine _ Jon Bonne _ Talks Google
2. replication mechanism.
Social Physics - How Good Ideas Spread _ Sandy Pentland _ Talks at Google
3. during replication.
Clever Girl _ Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya _ Talks at Google
4. Replication, reproducibility practices
Is Reproducible Research Accurate _ John Ioannidis _ Talks at Google
5. "Bacteriophage replication is initiated
ted-talks_1655_TylerDeWitt_2012X-320k
Ejemplos de uso de replication
1. It was a replication of the contours of his victory last week in Virginia.
2. Eventually the virus replication takes over so much of the cell‘s machinery that the cell dies.
3. "There was replication previously," Colonel Many–Bears Grinder of the U.S.
4. What the theory explains is what happens once life, or at least replication, gets going.
5. Then, it is expected that beneficiaries will promote the sharing of lessons and advocacy for replication.