About a transient state in user interfaces modes in videogames Game mode other uses Mode disambiguation Distinguish Multimodal interaction Modality human computer interaction In user interface design, a mode is a distinct setting within a computer program or any physical machine interface, in which the same ... alertbox springload.html Spring loaded modes DEFAULTSORT ModeComputerInterface Category Human computer interaction Category User interface techniques Category User interfaces ja ... are examples of a modal interface. Mode errors See also User error Modes are often frowned upon in interface design because they are likely to produce mode errors when the user forgets what state the interface is in, performs an action that is appropriate to a different mode, and gets an unexpected ..., or reverse. Modal interfaces require training and experience to avoid mode errors like these. Interface ... known modal interface components are probably the Caps lock and Insert key Insert keys on the standard computer keyboard , both of which put the user s typing into a different mode after being pressed, then return it to the regular mode after being re pressed. An interface that uses no modes is known as a modeless interface. ref http www.usabilityfirst.com glossary term 321.txl Usability Glossary modeless ref Modeless interfaces intend to avoid mode errors ref http www.usabilityfirst.com glossary mode error Usability Glossary mode error ref by making it impossible for the user to commit them. Definition A precise definition is given by Jef Raskin in his book The Humane Interface blockquote An human machine interface is modal with respect to a given gesture when 1 the current State computer science state of the interface is not the user s locus of attention and 2 the interface will execute ... 42 . blockquote In Raskin s sense and according to his definition, an interface is not modal as long ... of software well known for employing modes Text editor s typically are in insert mode by default ... more details
In computing , the DOS Protected ModeInterface DPMI is a specification introduced in 1989 which allows a DOS program to run in protected mode , giving access to many features of the processor not available in real mode . It was initially developed by Microsoft for Windows 3.0 , although Microsoft later ... mode mostly in ring computer security ring 3, least privileged . Overview DPMI allows a program to run in protected mode on the 80x86 series processors and make calls back to the operating system running in unprotected mode. For example, an MS DOS program can turn on protected mode, but still ... . http clio.rice.edu cwsdpmi dpmispec.txt DOS Protected ModeInterface DPMI Specification Version ... ModeInterface DPMI Specification Version 1.0 269  KiB External links http www.delorie.com djgpp ... Documentation File FOLDOC Category DOS memory management de DOS Protected ModeInterface es DOS Protected ModeInterface ko DPMI it DOS Protected ModeInterface ja DPMI pl DPMI ru DPMI ... book last Duncan first Ray year 1992 title Extending DOS A Programmer s Guide to Protected Mode DOS ... important reason for doing this is to allow protected mode programs to function under DOS, whose kernel used 16 bit real mode throughout its commercial life. Because MS DOS as a standalone operating ... advanced protected mode programs to run on the stable MS DOS platform. DPMI can be thought of as a translator that takes for example protected mode DOS calls and translates the registers to and from real and protected mode, including translating 16 bit segmented addresses and translating them to a suitable protected mode format. DPMI also allows, for some time, 32 bit programs to run under ... protected mode DOS programs in most DOS compatible multitasking operating systems. While Windows has ... must typically use DPMI to provide protected mode services or risk being incompatible. Systems such as FreeDOS ... computer types were upgraded from 16 bit to 32 bit, and the advanced program support was provided by upgrading ... more details
Cleanup date October 2009 Background Debug Mode BDM interface is an electronic interface that allows debugging of embedded system s. Specifically, it provides in circuit emulator in circuit debugging functionality in microcontrollers. It requires a single wire and specialized electronics in the system being debugged. It appears in many Freescale Semiconductor products. The interface allows a Host to manage and query a Target . Specialized hardware is required in the target device. No special hardware is required in the host a simple bi directional I O port I O pin is sufficient. I O signals The signals used by BDM to communicate data to and from the target are initiated by the host processor. The host wiktionary negates negates the transmission line, and then either wiktionary asserts Asserts the line sooner, to output a 1, Asserts the line later, to output a 0, Three state logic Tri states its output, allowing the target to drive the line. The host can sense a 1 or 0 as an input value. At the start of the next bit time, the host negates the transmission line, and the process repeats. Each bit is communicated in this manner. In other words the increasing complexity of today s software and hardware designs is leading to some fresh approaches to debugging. Silicon manufacturers offer more and more on chip debugging features for emulation of new processors . This capability, implemented in various processors under such names as Background Debug Mode BDM , Joint Test Action Group .... With a BDM 1 wire interface or JTAG standard JTAG debug port , you control and monitor the microcontroller solely through the stable on chip debugging services. This debugging mode runs even when ... in circuit debugging and programming requirements, the HC08 Family has the monitor mode and the HCS08 and RS08 utilize a background debug mode BDM . The background debug hardware on the HCS08 ... operating in Background Mode. References Motorola Freescale Semiconductor Inc. . CPU12 Reference ... more details
to access files and folders on Unix hosts. Modecomputerinterface , distinct method of operation within a computer program, in which the same user input can produce different results depending of the state of the computer. a Windows command line , tool for configuration of devices and the Command line interface console . Asynchronous Transfer Mode , a method of digital communication Popular culture Mode Records , a record label MO D E Magazine , a now out of print US women s fashion magazine created ...wiktionarypar mode TOCright Mode etymology from Latin modus manner, tune, measure, due measure, rhythm, melody may mean Transport mode , a means of transportation Block cipher modes of operation , in cryptography A technocomplex of stone tool s Mode of production , a Marxist term for way of producing goods Places Mode, Illinois , an unincorporated community in Shelby County, Illinois Mode, Banmauk , a village in Burma Mathematics Mode statistics , the value that has the largest number of observations Modes of convergence , a property of a series Science Normal mode , patterns of vibration in acoustics, electromagnetic theory, etc, Mode shape Longitudinal mode Transverse mode Quasinormal mode , a type of energy disspation of a perturbed object or field Starvation mode , a biological condition Language Mode literature Grammatical mood Narrative modeMode series , a quartet of novels by Piers Anthony Modes of persuasion , oratorical devices The Devil s Mode , a collection of short stories by Anthony Burgess Music Musical mode , a classification system of musical tonalities Modus medieval music , several other technical senses of modus or mode in medieval music theory Gregorian mode , a pitch ... see plus size model Mode magazine, a fictional fashion magazine which is the setting for the ABC series Ugly Betty Fashion Explosive Mode , an album See also Modal disambiguation Modality disambiguation disambig ar cs M d es Modo fa fr Mode ko it Moda disambigua nl Modus ja pl ... more details
C MRI Computer Model Railroad Interface is a set of electronic modules that allow a computer to monitor and control real world devices, including those used in conjunction with model railroads. C MRI was first introduced by Bruce Chubb in the February 1985 issue of the Model Railroader magazine. It appeared again with a four part series starting with the January 2004 issue titled Signaling Made Easier. This series is considered to provide a good and concise introduction to the C MRI and its application to signaling. Additionally, The Sunset Valley Oregon System Bruce s home model railroad layout was featured in the February and March 2006 issues of Model Railroader and the 2006 issue of Model Railroad Planning as well as in the March 2007 issue of the NMRA s magazine, Scale Rails . In addition to the above magazine articles, there are several books by Bruce Chubb on the subject Build your own Universal ComputerInterface out of print, first edition Paperback 320 pages Publisher Tab Books February 1989 ISBN 0 8306 9422 6 ISBN 0 8306 3122 4 pbk. ISBN 978 0830631223 Build your own Universal ComputerInterface out of print, second edition Paperback 410 pages Publisher McGraw Hill 1997 ISBN 0 07 912638 3 hc ISBN 0 07 912639 1 pbk. The Railroader s C MRI Applications Handbook version 2.1, 1999 Spiral bound, 8.5x11 paper 200 pages Self published by JLC Enterprises, Grand Rapids, MI The Computer Model Railroad Intervace C MRI Users Manual version 3.0, 2003 Spiral bound, 8.5x11 paper 250 pages Self published by JLC Enterprises, Grand Rapids, MI External links http www.jlcenterprises.net JLC Enterprises website Category Model railroad manufacturers software stub model rail stub ... more details
Neuropsychology A brain computerinterface BCI , sometimes called a direct neural interface or a brain machine interface BMI , is a direct communication pathway between the Human brain brain and an external ... the first appearance of the expression brain computerinterface in scientific literature. The field ... intracortical brain computerinterface by implanting neurotrophic cone electrodes into monkeys. File ... in development since 2000 in a project led by the Brain ComputerInterface R&D Program at the Wadsworth ... computerinterface is the extensive training required before users can work the technology. For example ... an EEG based brain computerinterface in the 1980s. ref cite journal pmid 2461285 year 1988 last1 Farwell ... 2&ftype manuscript FMRI Brain ComputerInterface A Tool for Neuroscientific Research and Treatment ... computerinterface for communication without the need of physical motor control or speech production ... g.tec , has been offering Brain ComputerInterface systems since 1999. The company provides base ... direct brain computer communication volume 2 pages 157 80 journal Annual review of biophysics ... KV title A direct brain interface based on event related potentials. volume 8 issue 2 pages 180 5 journal ... BCIs usually connect the brain or nervous system with a computer system. Practical neuroprosthetics ... usually designates a narrower class of systems which interface with the central nervous system. The terms ... out movement. Monkeys have navigated computer cursors on screen and commanded robotic arms to perform ... arm.jpg thumb Monkey operating a robotic arm with brain computer interfacing Monkey operating a robotic arm with brain computer interfacing The operant conditioning studies of Fetz and colleagues first ... were trained to reach and grasp objects on a computer screen by manipulating a joystick ... first8 CS last9 Nicolelis first9 MA title Learning to control a brain machine interface for reaching ... Interface year 2005 last1 Lebedev first1 M. A. journal Journal of Neuroscience volume 25 page 4681 ... more details
Bridge mode is a configuration option to enable Bridging networking Transparent Bridging Transparent Bridging . In IEEE 802.11 802.11a b g n type wireless networks , configuring bridge mode requires that the wireless side be configured to be a Station for a particular Access Point, so a configuration interface, often via an integrated webserver, is generally provided. In wired networks, such as ethernet , bridge mode generally requires no further configuration, as both sides are peers. While in this mode, the router basically accepts only one device and controls all network traffic dedicated to this device. Compu network stub Category Computer networking pt Modo ponte ... more details
Unreferenced date March 2009 In computing, retained mode rendering is a style for application programming interface s of graphics libraries, in which the libraries retain a complete model of the objects to be rendered. Citation needed date June 2009 Overview By using a retained mode approach, client calls do not directly cause actual rendering, but instead update an internal model typically a list of objects which is maintained within the library s data space. This allows the library to optimize when actual rendering takes place along with the processing of related objects. Citation needed date June 2009 Some techniques to optimize rendering include Citation needed date June 2009 managing double buffering performing occlusion culling only transferring data that has changed from one frame to the next from the application to the library Immediate mode is the opposite approach, but the two styles can coexist in the same library and are not necessarily exclusionary in practice. For example, OpenGL has immediate mode functions that can use previously defined server side objects textures, vertex and index buffers, shaders, etc. without resending unchanged data. Citation needed date June 2009 See also Scene graph Model view controller DEFAULTSORT Retained Mode Category Computer graphics Category 3D computer graphics nl Retained mode ... more details
Burst mode may refer to Burst mode computing , a computer term for the repeated transmission of data by a device without waiting for additional input. Burst mode firearm , a firing mode enabling a pre determined number of rounds to be fired with a single pull of the trigger. Burst mode photography , a mode of operating a camera that allows multiple snapshots to be taken in a single click of the shutter. Bursting or burst mode , a rapid signaling mode in neurons. in fiction Burst mode , in the Digimon fictional universe, a type of digivolution used in Digimon Savers that surpasses the Mega level disambig ... more details
Citations missing date July 2010 Sleep mode refers to a low power mode for electronic devices such as computers, televisions, and remote controlled devices. These modes save significant electrical consumption ... codes or wait for a machine to booting reboot . Many devices signify this power mode by a pulsing LED power light. Computers Sleep mode can go by many different names, including Stand By for Microsoft ... Server 2008 , and Suspend Windows 95 , Linux . When placed in this sleep mode, aside from the RAM which is required to restore the machine s state, the computer attempts to cut power to all unneeded parts of the machine. Because of the large power savings, most laptops automatically enter this mode when the computer is running on batteries and the lid is closed. Though sleep and hibernate OS feature ... machines also feature a variation of Sleep mode that incorporates the strengths of Hibernate. The RAM is copied to the hard drive before sleep mode is initiated, preserving the RAM contents in the event of a power loss. Advanced Configuration and Power Interface ACPI is the current standard for power ... OS feature hibernation on modern computers. Sleep mode corresponds to ACPI mode S3 . When a non ... operating system. Without ACPI functionality, as seen on older hardware, sleep mode is usually restricted to turning off the monitor and spinning down the hard drive. Sleep Mode Testing In the first years of introduction of sleep mode in the consumer market, it was usually not tested as thoroughly as the normal mode, causing various problems especially with peripherals like computer mice. Partly for these reasons, in industrial machines sleep mode was generally avoided because the costs associated with wasted time and materials far outweighed the savings in energy from sleep mode. See also Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Green computing Hibernation computing One Watt Initiative PC ... fr Veille mode de fonctionnement it Modalit d attesa nl Stand by ja pt Modo de ... more details
Unreferenced date March 2009 Context date January 2011 Immediate mode rendering is a style for application programming interface s of graphics libraries, in which client calls directly cause rendering of graphics objects to the display. It does not preclude the use of Multiple buffering double buffering . In contrast to retained mode , lists of objects to be rendered are not saved by the API library. Instead, the application must re issue all drawing commands required to describe the entire scene each time a new frame is required, regardless of actual changes. This method provides the maximum amount of control and flexibility to the application program. Although drawing commands have to be re issued for each new frame, modern systems using this method are generally able to avoid the unnecessary duplication of more memory intensive display data by referring to that unchanging data in the relatively short drawing commands. Link to textures, vertex buffers in video memory to explain last sentence? See also Display list Retained mode , the opposite of immediate mode Scene graph Category Computer graphics Category OpenGL Category DirectX nl Immediate mode ... more details
Monitor mode , or RFMON Radio Frequency Monitor mode, allows a computer with a wireless network interface controller NIC to monitor all traffic received from the wireless network. Unlike promiscuous mode , which is also used for packet sniffer packet sniffing , monitor mode allows packets to be captured without having to associate with an access point or ad hoc network first. Monitor mode only applies to wireless networks, while promiscuous mode can be used on both wired and wireless networks. Monitor mode is one of the six modes that 802.11 wireless cards can operate in Master acting as an access point , Managed client, also known as station , Ad hoc, Mesh, Repeater, and Monitor mode. Uses Monitor mode may be used for malicious purposes, such as collecting traffic for Wired Equivalent Privacy ... its terms of use are being followed. This mode is also somewhat useful during the design phase ... s that can read pcap files, provide a user interface for passive wireless network monitoring. Limitations Usually the wireless adapter is unable to transmit in monitor mode and is restricted to a single ..., and its chip set s features. Also, in monitor mode the adapter does not check to see if the cyclic .... Operating system support The Microsoft Windows Network Driver Interface Specification NDIS API does not support any extensions for wireless monitor mode in older versions of Windows. With NDIS 6, available in Windows Vista and later versions of Windows, it is possible to enable monitor mode. ref ... Mode work Windows Driver Kit Network Devices and Protocols publisher Microsoft accessdate 2007 11 30 ... such as Wildpackets OmniPeek provide their own device drivers to support monitor mode. Linux s interfaces for 802.11 drivers support monitor mode and many drivers offer that support. ref http www.hackernotcracker.com 2007 06 using aircrack ngaireplay ng under injection monitor mode in windows.html Aircrack Aireplay ng Under Packet Injection Monitor Mode in Windows retrieved September 11, 2007 ref ... more details
devices that are in promiscuous mode. There are basically two methods to do this If a network device is in promiscuous mode, the Kernel computer science kernel will receive all network traffic i.e. ...Unreferenced date December 2009 In computing, promiscuous mode or promisc mode is a configuration of a network card that makes the card pass all traffic it receives to the central processing unit rather than just frames addressed to it a feature normally used for packet sniffing , and bridged networking for hardware virtualization . Each frame includes the hardware Media Access Control address. When a network card receives a frame, it normally drops it unless the frame is addressed to that card. In promiscuous mode, however, the card allows all frames through, thus allowing the computer to read ... to enable promiscuous mode. A non routing node networking node in promiscuous mode can generally ... LAN or ring for Token ring or Fiber distributed data interface FDDI . Computers attached to the same ... use of promiscuous mode. A router may monitor all traffic that it routes. Promiscuous mode ... scanners can see this data. Therefore, computer users are encouraged to stay away from insecure protocols like telnet and use more secure ones such as Secure Shell SSH . Detection As promiscuous mode ... what the latency would be if promiscuous mode is deactivated. Also, an increase in the latency can be attributed ... to use this method in which case this deductive method is redundant. In promiscuous mode, some software ... blocks all ICMP traffic, this will be prevented. Some applications that use promiscuous mode NetScout ... VirtualBox bridge networking mode CommView for WiFi AccessData SilentRunner See also Packet analyzer Monitor mode DEFAULTSORT Promiscuous Mode Category Network analyzers de Promiscuous Mode es Modo promiscuo fr Promiscuous mode gl Modo promiscuo hu V logat s n lk li zemm d nl Promiscue modus ja pl Promiscuous mode pt Modo prom scuo ru Promiscuous mode ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Orphan date December 2009 Maximum mode is one of the two hardware modes available to the Intel 8086 and Intel 8088 8088 processors Central processing unit CPU . The other is minimum mode . Maximum mode is for large applications such as multiprocessing . The mode is hard wired into the circuit and cannot be changed by software. Specifically, pin 33 MN MX is either wired to voltage or to ground to determine the mode. Changing the state of pin 33 changes the function of certain other pins, most of which have to do with how the CPU handles the local computer bus bus . The IBM PC and PC XT use an Intel 8088 running in maximum mode. http www.8085projects.info post Maximum Mode Interface.aspx DEFAULTSORT Maximum Mode Category X86 architecture ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 The term native mode or native code is used in computing in two related senses. to describe something running on a computer natively or in native mode meaning that it is running without any external support as contrasted to running in emulation . Native operating system, native instruction set , etc., in application to a computer central processing unit processor means that the corresponding item was implemented specifically for the given model of the computer or microprocessor , as opposed to Emulator emulation or compatibility mode . DEFAULTSORT Native Mode Category Instruction processing software stub tr Yerli kip ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 X86 Processor Modes In x86 computing , unreal mode , also big real mode , huge real mode , or flat real mode , is a variant of real mode PE 0 , in which one or more data ... addressing mode that the x86 and x86 64 processors can operate in. It is used in the 80386 ... of whether they are operating in real or protected mode. The selector , i.e. the 16 bit segment ... memory Citation needed date February 2011 . It was used by many computer game s Citation needed date ... than in real mode only 1 mebibyte MiB only 640 kibibyte KiB usable on IBM PC compatible machines , without losing access to the DOS operating system which doesn t work in protected mode . After the introduction of Windows 95 , unreal mode quickly fell out of favor because programs using it cannot run in the DOS prompt of Microsoft Windows they require a Restart in MS DOS mode in Windows 95 and Windows ... systems, an emulator such as DOSBox is the only way to run programs designed for unreal mode. Unreal mode is still extensively used by BIOS code Citation needed date February 2011 . In particular the SMM mode in Intel 386SL and later processors places the processor in unreal mode. Enabling Unreal Mode To enable unreal mode without using any undocumented features of the CPU, the program has to enter protected mode , find or create a flat descriptor in the global descriptor table GDT or local descriptor table LDT , load some of the data segment registers with the respective protected mode selector , and then switch back to real mode. After returning to real mode, the processor will continue using the cached descriptors as established in protected mode, thus allowing access to 4 GiB of extended memory from real mode. There is a time penalty for leaving protected mode on the 286, because ... PC, 1994, pages 67 69, ISBN 0 201 62277 7 ref , can be used to enter unreal mode more quickly. Huge versus Big real mode As described above, unreal mode usually involves using one or more ... more details
IBM Personal Computer model machine type 5150 . This mode switching technique is also the one used by DPMI ... the reason why until Windows ME it was possible to restart the computer to MS DOS mode from within ...Unreferenced date December 2009 X86 Processor Modes Real mode , also called real address mode , is an operating mode of 80286 and later x86 compatible Central processing unit CPUs . Real mode is characterized ... and unlimited direct software access to all memory, I O addresses and peripheral hardware. Real mode ..., back to the original 8086 , have only one operational mode, which is equivalent to real mode in later chips. All x86 CPUs in the 80286 series and later start in real mode when reset. History The 286 architecture introduced protected mode , allowing for among other things hardware level memory ... to start in real mode &mdash that is, in a mode which turned off the new memory protection features ..., even the newest x86 CPUs including x86 64 CPUs start in real mode at power on and can run software ... BIOS which IBM introduced operates in real mode, as do the DOS operating systems MS DOS , DR DOS , etc. . Early versions of Microsoft Windows ran in real mode, until Windows 386 , which ran in protected mode, and the more fully realized Windows 3.0 , which could run in either real or protected mode. Windows 3.0 could actually run in two flavours of protected mode standard mode , which ran using protected mode, and 386 enhanced mode , which is a virtualized version of standard mode and thus would not run on a 286. Windows 3.1 removed support for real mode, and it was the first mainstream operating ... Unix , Linux , OS 2 , Windows 95 and later, etc. switch the CPU into protected mode at startup, but 64 bit operating systems will use this only as another stepping stone to get to long mode . It is worth noting that the protected mode of the 80286 is considerably more primitive than the improved protected mode introduced with the 80386 the latter is sometimes called 386 protected mode, and is the mode ... more details
For the spacecraft operating mode Safe mode spacecraft Safe mode is a Diagnosis diagnostic mode of a computer operating system OS . It can also refer to a mode of operation by application software . Safe mode is intended to fix most, if not all problems within an operating system. Operating system safe mode Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X are examples of contemporary operating systems that implement a safe mode called Safe Boot in Mac OS X as well as other complex electronics electronic devices . An operating system in safe mode will have reduced functionality, but the task of isolating problems ... to get to safe mode. An equivalently minimal setting in Unix like operating systems is Runlevel single user mode , in which Daemon computer software daemons and the X Window System are not started ... http hints.macworld.com article.php?story 20080414140636495 ref . In Windows, safe mode with Computer ... booting boot into its safe mode typically has a major problem, such as disk corruption or the installation ... normal operating mode. Though it varies by operating system, typically safe mode loads as few ... necessary to display information and accept input. Safe mode can also take the form of a parallel ... , a small text based troubleshooting mode kept separate from the main operating system and can also be accessed by booting the install CD , or to various safe mode options that run the dysfunctional operating system, but with features such as video drivers, audio and networking disabled. Safe mode ... the operating system from working normally. Safe mode is intended for maintenance, not functionality, and provides minimal access to features. Microsoft Windows safe mode is accessed by pressing ... of the Safe Mode Boot options in Windows XP ref Also, in a multi boot environment with multiple ... single user mode and grub ref . On Mac OS versions 6, 7, 8 and 9, a similar mode is achieved ... maintenance features Besides the mode selection, it runs a file system repair, and in Mac OS 10.4, it disables ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 In computing, legacy mode is a state in which a computer system, component, or software application behaves in a way different from its standard operation in order to support older software, data, or expected behavior. It differs from backward compatibility in that an item in this state will often sacrifice newer features or performance, or be unable to access data or run programs it normally could, in order to provide continued access to older data or functionality. Sometimes it can allow newer technologies that replaced the old to emulate them when running older operating systems. Examples x86 64 processors can be run in one of two states long mode provides larger physical address spaces and the ability to run 64 bit applications which can use larger virtual address spaces and more registers, and legacy mode. These processors legacy mode allows these processors to act as if they were 16 or 32 bit x86 processors with all of the abilities and limitations ... of Mac OS 9 applications on PowerPC based Macintoshes. Computer buses emulated through legacy mode ... 8086 mode to run in Windows. 32 bit x86 processors themselves have two legacy modes real mode and virtual 8086 mode. Real mode causes the processor to mostly act as if it was an original 8086, while virtual 8086 mode allows the creation of a virtual machine to allow the running of programs that require real mode in order to run under a protected mode environment. Protected mode is the non legacy mode of 32 bit x86 processors and the 80286. Most personal computer PC graphic card s have a Video Graphics Array VGA and a Super video graphics array SVGA mode that allows them to be used on systems .... Operating system s often have a special mode allowing them to emulate an older release in order ... computing Connection types USB keyboard Many SATA disk controllers offer a legacy mode of operation ... Legacy Mode Category Backward compatibility Category Legacy hardware Category Legacy systems ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 In the world of software development, maintenance mode refers to a point in a computer program program s life when it has reached all of its goals and is generally considered to be complete and Computer bug bug free. Continued development is deemed unnecessary or ill advised, but occasional bug fixes and security patches are still issued, hence the term maintenance mode. Maintenance mode often transitions to abandonware . Sometimes, when a popular free software project undergoes a major overhaul, the pre overhaul version is kept active and put into maintenance mode because it will still be widely used in production for the foreseeable future. Project Fork software development forks can also spawn from programs that go into maintenance mode too soon or have enough developer support for a more advanced version. A good example of this is the vi editor, which was in maintenance mode and forked into Vim text editor Vi IMproved . The Vim fork has many useful features that vi does not, such as syntax highlighting and the ability to have multiple open Buffer computer science buffer s. DEFAULTSORT Maintenance Mode Category Software maintenance compu prog stub ... more details
also Text user interface Text mode demos &mdash computer animations generated in text mode Teletext ...citations missing date October 2010 Lead too long date March 2011 Text mode is a kind of computer monitor computer display mode in which the content of the screen is internally represented in terms of character ... set . Text mode is contrasted to all points addressable APA mode or other kinds of computer graphics modes. Text mode video rendering came to prominence in the early 1970s, when video oriented text terminal s started to replace teleprinter s in the interactive use of computers. Text mode applications communicate with the user with command line interface s and text user interface s. Many character sets used in text mode applications also contain a limited set of predefined semi graphical characters .... Text mode rendering with user defined characters has also been useful for 2D Video game computer .... Many modern programs with a graphical interface simulate the display style of text mode programs, notably when it is important to preserve the vertical alignment of text, e.g., during computer ... be used to highlight the content or to simulate GUI widget widget or control interface objects found ..., text mode applications have relatively low bandwidth requirements in remote terminal use. An obvious disadvantage of text mode is the restricted screen content. An important characteristic of text mode programs is that they assume monospace font s, where every character has the same width on screen ... addressable . Programs that display output on remote computer terminal video terminal s must issue ... control sequences may lose synchronization with the actual display, so that many text mode programs ... redefines the character set to show tiny graphical GUI widget widgets , icon computer icon s and an arrow pointer in text mode. The border between text mode and graphical programs can sometimes be fuzzy, especially on the PC s VGA hardware, because many later text mode programs tried to push the model ... more details
Customize interface . Since Emacs version 22, org mode has been part of Emacs ref Citation last ...DISPLAYTITLE org mode Infobox software name org mode logo File Org mode unicorn.svg org mode logo screenshot caption author Carsten Dominik et. al developer Bastien Guerry programming language Emacs lisp latest release version 7.5 latest release date release date and age 2011 03 07 ref http permalink.gmane.org gmane.emacs.orgmode 38966 ref genre Personal information management , Notetaking , Outline summary Outlining , ... license GNU General Public License GPL website http www.orgmode.org Org mode is an editing mode in the text editor Emacs which supports the editing of plain text hierarchical documents. It has specific support for a number of different use cases, such as writing to do lists, project planning, and writing web pages. For example, to do items can optionally be given priorities ... for the items to be done this week can then be automatically generated by org mode. ref Citation last Chavan first Abhijeet title Get Organized with Emacs Org mode journal Linux Journal year 2007 url http www.linuxjournal.com article 9116 ref Most aspects of org mode s behaviour are customisable, in the standard ... 206916 ref although it is also released separately, and newer versions of org mode than the ones shipped with Emacs are often available. Integration Org mode can integrate with Emacs BBDB to link to contact details for people Web browsers such as Firefox , to link to URLs Remember mode to quickly ... org mode extensions, which are all free software. Distributed issue tracking Org mode can be used as a distributed ... control system. Developers of the org babel extension to org mode use org mode in this way to track ... dev ref External links http www.orgmode.org Org mode website http orgmode.org worg org tutorials index.php List of Org mode text and video tutorials on the Org mode wiki, http orgmode.org worg index.php ... management software Category Lightweight markup languages de Org mode es Org mode fr Org mode ... more details
VR mode or Video Recording mode is a feature on stand alone consumer and computer DVD recorders that allows video recording and editing on a DVD rewritable disc. In VR mode, users can create and rename titles for the scenes. Also, if a scene is deleted, the space allocated by it will be utilized later without the need of reformatting a disc. If the user would like to record on the same disc again at a later time, in VR mode, users may eject the disc and it will not be finalized by the recorder until it is manually initiated. For the sake of comparison, any DVD disc recorded in VR s competitor V mode or Video mode will be automatically finalized before it is ejected by the recorder. Disc finalization is still required if the disc formatted for VR mode will be played in another DVD player. Currently, users can only record in VR mode with the use of DVD RW , DVD RAM and DVD RW discs, updated in 2000 to accommodate DVD R General DVD players marked RW compatible and DVD Multi can play DVD VR recorded discs and on some recorders, also on hard disk drives. Blu ray Disc and HD DVD also support VR mode like features. DVD VR & DVD VR There are two quite different application formats commonly known as VR mode. br 1 DVD VR was established by the DVD Forum and can be found on DVD RW and DVD RAM br 2 DVD VR is the creation and responsibility of Philips Electronics and is seen on their DVD RW recorders. DVD VR The DVD VR recording mode offers advanced editing including Non Linear Editing NLE but is not compatible with DVD Video. DVD VR The DVD VR recording mode aka VR functionality is compatible with DVD Video normal DVD Video players , but offers basic editing like partial overwriting, title dividing, chapter marker placement, replace the menu screens, etc. See also DVD Blu ray Disc HD DVD DVD VR DVD VR References cite web title PC World.com Next Generation DVD url http www.pcworld.com resource article 0,aid,118179,pg,11,00.asp DEFAULTSORT Vr Mode Category DVD ... more details
vgamodex vgamx1.html Introduction to Mode X by Robert Jambor Category Computer display standards es Modo X fr Mode X ...Mode X is an alternative video graphics mode graphics display mode of the International Business Machines ... in Dr. Dobb s Journal of Computer Calisthenics & Orthodontia Dr. Dobb s Journal , republished in chapters ... article1698.asp ref The primary advantage of Mode X is that it has square pixels a resolution of 320x240 instead of the VGA standard Mode 13h which is 320x200. Additionally, Abrash enabled the VGA s planar memory mode also called unchained mode . Even though planar memory mode was a documented part of the VGA standard, it was first widely publicized in the Mode X articles, leading many programmers to consider Mode X and planar memory synonymous. It is possible to enable planar memory in standard 320x200 mode. The term Mode X was coined by Michael Abrash, who called it this in his articles. Though this mode had been used earlier by others ref Ibid. pg. 877 ref i.e. in many commercial games , it became ... gained by this arrangement were considered very worthwhile by many, and Mode X found considerable use in Demo computer programming demos and 2D computer graphics 2D games. The main uses ... latches Planar mode allows up to 4 adjoining pixels to be modified in one byte write operation, which ... where the height width ratio matches the monitor s, as they usually do in the 320x240 mode. Simply turning on unchained mode but leaving the resolution at 320x200 became informally known as Mode ... browse thread thread 66bb2a3530af9618 1b00273db2f76620? 1b00273db2f76620 title Mode ... Mode Q Q being short for Cube is often used to refer to the Chain 4 256x256x256 colours VGA compatible tweak mode. This mode s advantage is the simplistic and fast method for addressing pixels in memory ... http www.gamedev.net reference articles article356.asp Mode X tutorial at GameDev.net http www.gameprogrammer.com ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 A compatibility mode is a software mechanism in which a computer s operating system emulate s an older central processing unit processor , operating system, and or Platform computing hardware platform in order to allow obsolete software to remain compatible with the computer s newer hardware or software. This differs from a full fledged emulator in that an emulator typically creates a virtual hardware architecture on the host system, rather than simply translating the older system s function calls into calls that the host system can understand. Examples include Classic Mode in Mac OS X and Windows 2000 Windows 2000 s Windows XP Windows XP s Windows Vista Windows Vista s Windows 7 Windows 7 s compatibility mode, which both allow applications designed for older versions of the operating system to run. Other examples include Wine software Wine to run Windows programs on Linux OS X and Mono software Mono to run .NET Framework .NET programs on various Unix like systems. DEFAULTSORT Compatibility Mode Category Interoperability Category Windows software Category Mac OS X software Category Linux emulation software Operating system stub de Kompatibilit tsmodus fr mode de compatibilit ja ... more details