green bytes - définition. Qu'est-ce que green bytes
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est green bytes - définition

Soundbytes; Sound bytes

green bytes      
<jargon> (Or "green words") Meta-information embedded in a file, such as the length of the file or its name; as opposed to keeping such information in a separate description file or record. By extension, the non-data bits in any self-describing format. "A GIF file contains, among other things, green bytes describing the packing method for the image". At a meeting of the SHARE Systems Division, November 22, 1964, in Washington, DC, George Mealy of IBM described the new block tape format for FORTRAN in which unformatted binary records had a Control Word. George used green chalk to describe it. No one liked the contents of the Green Word (not information, wrong location, etc.) so Conrad Weisert and Channing Jackson made badges saying "Stamp out Green Words". This was the first computer badge. Compare out-of-band, zigamorph, fence. Button 251 (http://mxg.com/thebuttonman/search.asp). [Jargon File] (1994-11-02)
green         
  • The [[Chicago River]] is dyed green every year to mark [[St. Patrick's Day]]
  • Indian FSSAI labels. The green dot symbol (top-left) identifies lacto-vegetarian food.
  • [[Fireworks]] typically use [[barium]] salts to create green sparks
  • A dark green square
  • A green light is the universal symbol of permission to go
  • The word ''green'' has the same Germanic root as the words for ''grass'' and ''grow''
  • The notion of "green" in modern European languages corresponds to about 520&ndash;570&nbsp;nm, but many historical and non-European languages make other choices, e.g. using a term for the range of ca. 450&ndash;530&nbsp;nm ("blue/green") and another for ca. 530&ndash;590&nbsp;nm ("green/yellow").
  • A green [[mamba]]
  • Green, blue and red are [[additive colors]]. All the colors seen are made by mixing them in different intensities.
ADDITIVE PRIMARY COLOR, VISIBLE BETWEEN BLUE AND YELLOW
List of terms associated with the color green; Green (color); Green (colour); Pastel green; The color green; The colour green; Greenness; (0, 255, 0); Rgb(0, 255, 0); Symbolism of green; 00FF00; Guignet green; Greeen
I
adj. (cannot stand alone) green with (envy)
II
n.
color
, bright; dark; light green
green light
2) on green (turn on green only)
green         
  • The [[Chicago River]] is dyed green every year to mark [[St. Patrick's Day]]
  • Indian FSSAI labels. The green dot symbol (top-left) identifies lacto-vegetarian food.
  • [[Fireworks]] typically use [[barium]] salts to create green sparks
  • A dark green square
  • A green light is the universal symbol of permission to go
  • The word ''green'' has the same Germanic root as the words for ''grass'' and ''grow''
  • The notion of "green" in modern European languages corresponds to about 520&ndash;570&nbsp;nm, but many historical and non-European languages make other choices, e.g. using a term for the range of ca. 450&ndash;530&nbsp;nm ("blue/green") and another for ca. 530&ndash;590&nbsp;nm ("green/yellow").
  • A green [[mamba]]
  • Green, blue and red are [[additive colors]]. All the colors seen are made by mixing them in different intensities.
ADDITIVE PRIMARY COLOR, VISIBLE BETWEEN BLUE AND YELLOW
List of terms associated with the color green; Green (color); Green (colour); Pastel green; The color green; The colour green; Greenness; (0, 255, 0); Rgb(0, 255, 0); Symbolism of green; 00FF00; Guignet green; Greeen
(greens, greener, greenest)
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
1.
Green is the colour of grass or leaves.
...shiny red and green apples...
Yellow and green together make a pale green.
green">COLOUR
2.
A place that is green is covered with grass, plants, and trees and not with houses or factories.
Cairo has only thirteen square centimetres of green space for each inhabitant.
green">ADJ
greenness
...the lush greenness of the river valleys.
green">N-UNCOUNT
3.
Green issues and political movements relate to or are concerned with the protection of the environment.
The power of the Green movement in Germany has made that country a leader in the drive to recycle more waste materials.
green">ADJ: ADJ n
4.
If you say that someone or something is green, you mean they harm the environment as little as possible.
...trying to persuade governments to adopt greener policies...
green">ADJ
greenness
A Swiss company offers to help environmental investors by sending teams round factories to ascertain their greenness.
green">N-UNCOUNT
5.
Greens are members of green political movements.
The Greens see themselves as a radical alternative to the two major British political parties.
green">N-COUNT: usu pl
6.
A green is a smooth, flat area of grass around a hole on a golf course.
...the 18th green.
green">N-COUNT
7.
A green is an area of land covered with grass, especially in a town or in the middle of a village.
...the village green.
green">N-COUNT
8.
Green is used in the names of places that contain or used to contain an area of grass.
...Bethnal Green.
green">N-IN-NAMES: n N
9.
You can refer to the cooked leaves of vegetables such as spinach or cabbage as greens.
green">N-PLURAL
10.
If you say that someone is green, you mean that they have had very little experience of life or a particular job.
He was a young lad, very green, very immature.
green">ADJ
11.
If you say that someone is green with envy, you mean that they are very envious indeed.
green">PHRASE: v-link PHR
12.
If someone has green fingers, they are very good at gardening and their plants grow well. (BRIT; in AM, use a green thumb
)
You don't need green fingers to fill your home with lush leaves.
green">PHRASE
13.
to give someone the green light: see light

Wikipédia

Sound Bytes
Note: this article is about a Rochester, New York-based radio program called "Sound Bytes". You may be looking for Sound bite, an article about snippets of audio or video broadcast in the media.

Sound Bytes is the title of a weekly program that airs on WGMC, a Rochester, NY radio station. It can be heard Saturdays starting at noon Eastern Time, and lasts approximately two hours. The name is a play on words of the words sound bite and byte.

The focus of the show is computers, computer users, and the computing industry, and also sometimes covers technology in general and its social and political implications. It is hosted by Nick Francesco, Dave Enright, and Steve Rea. The format of the show also allows computer users to call in to try to get assistance with their computer problems. Unlike many strictly local radio station programs, the Sound Bytes crew allows those who are listening to the show via the Internet to get on the air as well.

As anyone who has worked in retail can attest, sometimes customers need to be taken to task for their lack of forethought or reasonableness on issues. "Uncle Dave's Story Hour" is a regular feature of the show which is a rant about something that happened that raised the ire of Dave Enright in his shop. It's always good for a chuckle.

Each of the hosts is a specialist in the computing field. Nick is a retired Systems Administrator for the E. Philip Saunders College of Business at the Rochester Institute of Technology. Dave ran a computer sales and repair shop [1] which concentrates on Intel architecture PCs. Steve works for a computer sales and repair company [2] that concentrates on Apple products.

The hosts of the show have come up with a methodology of ridding a computer running Microsoft operating systems of malware called The Security Tango. It consists of deleting files from the computer and running tools that flag and remove malware. It also makes recommendations of what programs (firewalls, antivirus, etc.) users should be running regularly on their computers to keep them relatively secure. Most of the tools and programs in The Security Tango are freeware. Eventually, "The Tango" was expanded to include procedures for Apple (the Macarena and the iPhone Pavane), the Linux Lambada, and the Android Allemande. The procedure for Microsoft Windows was renamed the Windows Waltz. Therefore, the Security Tango has come to mean the suite of procedures, with the individual dances for different platforms.

Having been on the air in some form since September 2, 1989, their "claim to fame" is the longest running show about computers. The program originally aired on WXXI in Rochester (the region's principal NPR affiliate) and was created by then-WXXI radio vice president Mark Boardman and original host Bob Smith. Francesco, Enright and Rea joined as regular panelists early in the program's run, later opting to take the program to commercial competitor WHAM-AM (which carried it in various time slots on weekends from December 2001 until cancelling it at the end of the decade). It then moved to its current home on WGMC.