file system compression - определение. Что такое file system compression
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Что (кто) такое file system compression - определение

ARCHIVE FILE FORMAT
ACE (compression file format)
Найдено результатов: 11121
Synthetic file system         
HIERARCHICAL INTERFACE TO NON-FILE OBJECTS THAT APPEAR AS IF THEY WERE REGULAR FILES
Synthetic Filesystem; Synthetic file; Pseudo file system
In computer science, a synthetic file system or a pseudo file system is a hierarchical interface to non-file objects that appear as if they were regular files in the tree of a disk-based or long-term-storage file system. These non-file objects may be accessed with the same system calls or utility programs as regular files and directories.
TiVo Media File System         
PROPRIETARY FILE SYSTEM USED ON TIVO HARD DRIVES
Tivo's Media File System; Tivo Media File System
The MFS or Media File System is a proprietary file system used on TiVo hard drives for fault tolerant real-time recording of live TV.
Oracle Cloud File System         
COMPUTER FILESYSTEM WHICH STORES DATA IN ORACLE ASM
User:Ashakian/Oracle Cloud File System (ACFS and ADVM); Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Oracle Cloud File System; ASM Cluster File System; ASM Dynamic Volume Manager
Oracle Cloud File System (CloudFS) is a storage management suite developed by Oracle Corporation. CloudFS consists of a cluster file system called ASM Cluster File System (ACFS), and a cluster volume manager called ASM Dynamic Volume Manager (ADVM) initially released in August 2007.
Windows File Protection         
WINDOWS COMPONENT THAT PROTECTS THE CRITICAL SYSTEM FILES FROM OVERWRITING OR DELETING BY PROGRAMS
System File Protection; Windows file protection; System file protection; Dllcache
Windows File Protection (WFP), a sub-system included in Microsoft Windows operating systems of the Windows 2000 and Windows XP era, aims to prevent programs from replacing critical Windows system files. Protecting core system files mitigates problems such as DLL hell with programs and the operating system.
file system         
  • An example of slack space, demonstrated with 4,096-[[byte]] NTFS clusters: 100,000 files, each five bytes per file, which equal to 500,000 bytes of actual data but require 409,600,000 bytes of disk space to store <!-- The size listing shown in Explorer is oddly doubly-wrong. The example files are 5 bytes each, not 0.1K, and the clusters are a minimum of 4K not 1K.-->
  • Windows]] command shell
  • fragmented]]
CONCRETE FORMAT OR PROGRAM FOR STORING FILES AND DIRECTORIES ON A DATA STORAGE DEVICE
Filesystem; Disk file systems; Special purpose file systems; File system types; Disk file system; Special purpose file system; File systems; File storage; File System; Disk File System; Filesystems; Computer file system; File-system; File access; Serial files; Sequential file; Crash count; File time; Offline File System; Sequential files; Special file system; Prospero (file system); File processing system; Linux file systems; File system metadata; Linux filesystems; Virtual file; Dentries; Dentry; Directory entry; File system manager; Flat file system; Linux filesystem; Tree quota; Transactional file system; Tape file system; Microsoft Windows file systems
<operating system> (FS, or "filesystem") 1. A system for organizing directories and files, generally in terms of how it is implemented in the disk operating system. E.g., "The Macintosh file system is just dandy as long as you don't have to interface it with any other file systems". 2. The collection of files and directories stored on a given drive (floppy drive, hard drive, disk partition, logical drive, RAM drive, etc.). E.g., "mount attaches a named file system to the file system hierarchy at the pathname location directory [...]" -- Unix manual page for "mount(8)". As an extension of this sense, "file system" is sometimes used to refer to the representatation of the file system's organisation (e.g. its file allocation table) as opposed the actual content of the files in the file system. Unix manual page: fs(5), mount(8). (1997-04-10)
File system         
  • An example of slack space, demonstrated with 4,096-[[byte]] NTFS clusters: 100,000 files, each five bytes per file, which equal to 500,000 bytes of actual data but require 409,600,000 bytes of disk space to store <!-- The size listing shown in Explorer is oddly doubly-wrong. The example files are 5 bytes each, not 0.1K, and the clusters are a minimum of 4K not 1K.-->
  • Windows]] command shell
  • fragmented]]
CONCRETE FORMAT OR PROGRAM FOR STORING FILES AND DIRECTORIES ON A DATA STORAGE DEVICE
Filesystem; Disk file systems; Special purpose file systems; File system types; Disk file system; Special purpose file system; File systems; File storage; File System; Disk File System; Filesystems; Computer file system; File-system; File access; Serial files; Sequential file; Crash count; File time; Offline File System; Sequential files; Special file system; Prospero (file system); File processing system; Linux file systems; File system metadata; Linux filesystems; Virtual file; Dentries; Dentry; Directory entry; File system manager; Flat file system; Linux filesystem; Tree quota; Transactional file system; Tape file system; Microsoft Windows file systems
In computing, file system or filesystem (often abbreviated to fs) is a method and data structure that the operating system uses to control how data is stored and retrieved. Without a file system, data placed in a storage medium would be one large body of data with no way to tell where one piece of data stopped and the next began, or where any piece of data was located when it was time to retrieve it.
data compression         
  • Comparison of [[spectrogram]]s of audio in an uncompressed format and several lossy formats. The lossy spectrograms show [[bandlimiting]] of higher frequencies, a common technique associated with lossy audio compression.
  • Processing stages of a typical video encoder
  • [[MP3]], an example of a lossy file format compared to [[WAV]].
  • Solidyne 922: The world's first commercial audio bit compression [[sound card]] for PC, 1990
PROCESS OF ENCODING INFORMATION USING FEWER BITS THAN THE ORIGINAL REPRESENTATION
Multimedia compression; Data compression/multimedia compression; Video compression; Data compression algorithm; Compression algorithm; Uncompression; File compression; Data Compression; Block compression; Spatial compression; Temporal compression; Intelligent Compression; Transparent decompression; Compression algorithms; Datacompression; Source Coding; Bit-rate reduction; File compressing; Digital audio compression; Lossless audio compression; Compression program; Compression utility; Coding techniques; Source coding; Audio data compression; Lossless audio; Perceptual audio coding; Video Compression; Lossless Audio; Negabyte; Sound compression; Audio compression (data); Compression software; Decompression software; Compressed data; Video data compression; Video encoding; Encoding software; Data decompression; Lossy audio compression; Uncompressed; Compressed video; Compressed digital video; Digital video compression; Lossless video compression; Text compression; Genetic compression algorithm; Algorithms for lossless data compression; History of video compression; Perceptual audio coder; Compression techniques; Machine learning and data compression; History of audio compression
<algorithm> compression. Probably to distinguish it from (electronic) signal compression. (1995-04-02)
compressed video         
  • Comparison of [[spectrogram]]s of audio in an uncompressed format and several lossy formats. The lossy spectrograms show [[bandlimiting]] of higher frequencies, a common technique associated with lossy audio compression.
  • Processing stages of a typical video encoder
  • [[MP3]], an example of a lossy file format compared to [[WAV]].
  • Solidyne 922: The world's first commercial audio bit compression [[sound card]] for PC, 1990
PROCESS OF ENCODING INFORMATION USING FEWER BITS THAN THE ORIGINAL REPRESENTATION
Multimedia compression; Data compression/multimedia compression; Video compression; Data compression algorithm; Compression algorithm; Uncompression; File compression; Data Compression; Block compression; Spatial compression; Temporal compression; Intelligent Compression; Transparent decompression; Compression algorithms; Datacompression; Source Coding; Bit-rate reduction; File compressing; Digital audio compression; Lossless audio compression; Compression program; Compression utility; Coding techniques; Source coding; Audio data compression; Lossless audio; Perceptual audio coding; Video Compression; Lossless Audio; Negabyte; Sound compression; Audio compression (data); Compression software; Decompression software; Compressed data; Video data compression; Video encoding; Encoding software; Data decompression; Lossy audio compression; Uncompressed; Compressed video; Compressed digital video; Digital video compression; Lossless video compression; Text compression; Genetic compression algorithm; Algorithms for lossless data compression; History of video compression; Perceptual audio coder; Compression techniques; Machine learning and data compression; History of audio compression
lossy         
DATA COMPRESSION APPROACH THAT RESULTS IN LOSS OR CHANGE OF SOME DATA
Lossy; Lossy encoding; Lossy data compression; Data compression/lossy; List of lossy compression methods; Irreversible compression
<algorithm> A term describing a data compression algorithm which actually reduces the amount of information in the data, rather than just the number of bits used to represent that information. The lost information is usually removed because it is subjectively less important to the quality of the data (usually an image or sound) or because it can be recovered reasonably by interpolation from the remaining data. MPEG and JPEG are examples of lossy compression techniques. Opposite: lossless. (1995-03-29)
Filé (band)         
BAND
File (band)
Filé is a cajun music ensemble from Louisiana founded in 1983. The group is named after filé powder, a spice used in cajun food.

Википедия

ACE (compressed file format)

In computing, ACE is a proprietary data compression archive file format developed by Marcel Lemke, and later bought by e-merge GmbH. The peak of its popularity was 1999–2001, when it provided slightly better compression rates than RAR, which has since become more popular.