punching cards - traduction vers néerlandais
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punching cards - traduction vers néerlandais

COMPUTER NETWORKING TECHNIQUE
NAT Hole punching; NAT hole punching

punching cards      
het perforeren (het ponsen van papieren strippen van computers, primitieve manier voor werken op computer)
punching bag         
  • url-status=dead }} (advertisement in monthly magazine)</ref>
  • Gus Keller, 1903
  • A "body opponent bag" on a pedestal mount
  • Woman working out with a speed bag (AKA, speedball)
BAG DESIGNED TO BE REPEATEDLY PUNCHED
Boxing bag; Heavy bag; Speed bag; Speed Bag; Heavy Bag; Kicking Bag; Kicking bag; Punching Bag; Punch bag; Punchbag; Speedball (boxing); Punch-bag; Speedbag; Heavy bags
n. stootzak, stootkussen
punch card         
  • [[Aperture card]]
  • An 80-column punched card with the extended character set introduced with [[EBCDIC]] in 1964.
  • A U.S. Census Bureau clerk (left) prepares punch cards using a pantograph similar to that developed by Herman Hollerith for the 1890 Census, while a second clerk (right) uses a 1930s key punch to perform the same task more quickly.
  • Carpet loom with Jacquard apparatus by Carl Engel, around 1860. Chain feed is on the left.
  • A wall-sized display sample of a punch card for the 1954 U.S. Census of Agriculture
  • Punched card from a [[Fortran]] program: Z(1) = Y + W(1), plus sorting information in the last 8 columns.
  • HP Educational Basic optical mark-reader card.
  • Hollerith card as shown in the ''[[Railroad Gazette]]'' in 1895, with 12 rows and 24 columns.<ref name="Railroad_1895"/>
  • Binary]] punched card.
  • United States National Archives Records Service]] facility in 1959. Each carton could hold 2,000 cards.
  • Invalid "lace cards" such as this pose mechanical problems for card readers.
  • Clerk creating punch cards containing data from the [[1950 United States census]].
  • A 5081 card from a non-IBM manufacturer.
  • A punched card printing plate.
  • A deck of punched cards comprising a computer program. The red diagonal line is a visual aid to keep the deck sorted.<ref name="Miami"/>
  • A blank [[Remington Rand]] [[UNIVAC]] format card. Card courtesy of [[MIT Museum]].
  • A punched Remington Rand card with an IBM card for comparison
  • IBM 96-column punched card
  • Woman operating the card puncher, c.1940
  • A $75 U.S. Savings Bond, Series EE issued as a punched card. Eight of the holes record the bond serial number.
  • Institutions, such as universities, often had their general purpose cards printed with a logo. A wide variety of forms and documents were printed on punched cards, including checks. Such printing did not interfere with the operation of the machinery.
  • A 12-row/80-column [[IBM]] punched card from the mid-twentieth century
PAPER-BASED RECORDING MEDIUM
Punched cards; Punchcard; Punch cards; Punch Card; Hollerith card; Hollerith cards; IBM card; Hollerith Card; Tabulating card; Computer punch card; Punched-card; Input deck; Punchcards; Punch-card; Punch card; Overpunch; Hollerith encoding; Hollerith code; Port-a-punch; IBM Port-A-Punch; Punched card code; IBM 96-column punched card format; IBM 80-column card; Card deck (computing); Punched-card systems
n. knipkaartje

Définition

punch bag

Wikipédia

Hole punching (networking)

Hole punching (or sometimes punch-through) is a technique in computer networking for establishing a direct connection between two parties in which one or both are behind firewalls or behind routers that use network address translation (NAT). To punch a hole, each client connects to an unrestricted third-party server that temporarily stores external and internal address and port information for each client. The server then relays each client's information to the other, and using that information each client tries to establish direct connection; as a result of the connections using valid port numbers, restrictive firewalls or routers accept and forward the incoming packets on each side.

Hole punching does not require any knowledge of the network topology to function. ICMP hole punching, UDP hole punching and TCP hole punching respectively use Internet Control Message, User Datagram and Transmission Control Protocols.