Glossary: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
Line 30: Line 30:
|<span id="0-Day">0-Day</span>
|<span id="0-Day">0-Day</span>
|
|
See [[#Zero Day|Zero Day]].
{{Glossary:Zero Day}}


|-
|-
|2FA
|<span id="2FA">2FA</span>
|
|
See [[#Two Factor Authentication|Two factor Authentication]].
{{Glossary:Two Factor Authentication}}


|-
|-
Line 43: Line 43:
|<span id="AC">AC</span>
|<span id="AC">AC</span>
|
|
AC or Alternating Current is an electrical supply which reverses direction many times per second. See [[AC and DC]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:AC}}


|-
|-
|AC/DC motor
|<span id="AC/DC motor">AC/DC motor</span>
|
|
See [[#Universal Motor|Universal Motor]].
{{Glossary:Universal Motor}}


|-
|-
|Adware
|<span id="Adware">Adware</span>
|
|
Adware is a type of [[#Malware|malware]] which presents you with unwanted advertising that you never knowingly agreed to receive.
{{Glossary:Adware}}


|-
|-
|<span id="AF">AF</span>
|<span id="AF">AF</span>
|
|
AF or Audio Frequency is a [[#Frequency|frequency]] within the audible range of approximately 20[[#Hertz|Hz]] - 20[[#kHz|kHz]].
{{Glossary:AF}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Aftermarket">Aftermarket</span>
|<span id="Aftermarket">Aftermarket</span>
|
|
Aftermarket refers to spare parts, consumables or accessories for an item not manufactured and sold by the item's manufacturer, but by a third party.
{{Glossary:Aftermarket}}


|-
|-
|AM
|<span id="AM">AM</span>
|
|
AM or Amplitude Modulation is a method of [[#Modulation|modulation]] in which the amplitude of an [[#RF|RF]] signal is modulated by the [[#AF|AF]] signal to be transmitted. See [[How_radios_work#Amplitude_Modulation_.28AM.29|Amplitude Modulation]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:AM}}


|-
|-
|<span id="AMD64">AMD64</span>
|<span id="AMD64">AMD64</span>
|
|
AMD64 is a 64 bit [[#CPU|CPU]] architecture created by AMD as an evolutionary development of the Intel [[#x86|x86]] 32 bit architecture.
{{Glossary:AMD64}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Amp">Amp (A)</span>
|<span id="Amp">Amp</span>
|
|
The Amp is the unit of electric current, i.e. the quantity of electricity passing, a bit like the amount of water flowing in a river. Named after French mathematician and physicist [[Wikipedia:André-Marie_Ampère|André-Marie Ampère]], remembered for his early work on electromagnetism. See [[Electric circuits, volts amps watts and ohms]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Amp}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Analogue">Analogue</span>
|<span id="Analogue">Analogue</span>
|
|
Analogue is a method of representing a signal by a voltage (or a current) which is directly proportional to the value of the signal at any instant. For example, the output of a microphone is a voltage which continuously varies in direct proportion to the pressure of the incident sound wave.
{{Glossary:Analogue}}


|-
|-
|Anode
|<span id="Anode">Anode</span>
|
|
An Anode is a positive [[#Electrode|electrode]].
{{Glossary:Anode}}


|-
|-
Line 94: Line 94:


|-
|-
|B7G
|<span id="B7G">B7G</span>
|
|
B7G was a 7-pin base used on miniature all-glass [[#Valve|valves]].
{{Glossary:B7G}}


|-
|-
|B9A
|<span id="B9A">B9A</span>
|
|
B9A was a 9-pin base used on miniature all-glass [[#Valve|valves]].
{{Glossary:B9A}}


|-
|-
|BC
|<span id="BC">BC</span>
|
|
BC or Bayonet Cap is a type of lamp base fitted with a push-and-twist action. There are several sizes but the 22mm diameter size is much the commonest. See [[Table_lamps#Types_of_bulb|Types of bulb]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:BC}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Bimetallic Strip">Bimetallic Strip</span>
|<span id="Bimetallic Strip">Bimetallic Strip</span>
|
|
A bimetallic strip consists of two strips of different metals fixed together. When heated up, one strip expands more than the other, causing the combined strip to bend away from the one which is expanding more. Often made into a snap action to create a switch which snaps open at a given temperature.
{{Glossary:Bimetallic Strip}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Binary">Binary</span>
|<span id="Binary">Binary</span>
|
|
Binary is a number system using only the digits 0 and 1, well suited to computers as they can represent those digits by the on and off states of a switch.
{{Glossary:Binary}}


|-
|-
|<span id="BIOS">BIOS</span>
|<span id="BIOS">BIOS</span>
|
|
The BIOS or Basic Input/Output System was a program built in to PCs up until around 2011, which controled the PC prior to booting and initiated the boot process. (Newer computers use [[#UEFI|UEFI]]). See [[UEFI_and_GPT#BIOS_vs_UEFI|BIOS vs UEFI]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:BIOS}}


|-
|-
|Bipolar Transistor
|<span id="Bipolar Transistor">Bipolar Transistor</span>
|
|
See [[#Junction Transistor|junction transistor]].
{{Glossary:Junction Transistor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Bit">Bit</span>
|<span id="Bit">Bit</span>
|
|
A bit or [[#Binary|binary]] digit is the smallest unit of data, representing one of two values or states such as 1/0, or yes/no, or love Marmite/hate Marmite.
{{Glossary:Bit}}


|-
|-
|Bluetooth
|<span id="BJT">BJT</span>
|
|
Bluetooth is a [[#PAN|personal area networking]] protocol allowing an individual's personal devices to communicate with one another.
{{Glossary:Junction Transistor}}
 
|-
|<span id="Bluetooth">Bluetooth</span>
|
{{Glossary:Bluetooth}}
 
|-
|<span id="Boost regulator">Boost regulator</span>
|
{{Glossary:Boost regulator}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Bootstrap">Bootstrap</span>
|<span id="Bootstrap">Bootstrap</span>
|
|
A bootstrap is a multi-stage process, for example for starting a computer, in which each stage (starting with a very simple one) enables the next more sophisticated stage to happen, like pulling yourself up by your bootstraps. A bootloader is a program which uses the bootstrap principle to "boot up" a computer into its running state.
{{Glossary:Bootstrap}}


|-
|-
|Bot
|<span id="Bot">Bot</span>
|
|
A bot (short for Robot) is a computer which has been compromised in order to autonomously use its Internet connection for spreading [[#Spam|spam]] or [[#Malware|malware]]. Usually it will be one of many such computers comprising a "botnet", under the control of a "bot herder".
{{Glossary:Bot}}


|-
|-
|Brick
|<span id="Brick">Brick</span>
|
|
To "brick" a device is to render it completely useless, i.e. having as much functionality as a house brick. This can happen, for example, if the wrong type of [[#Firmware|firmware]] is accidentally loaded. "Unbricking" it can then be challenging if not virtually impossible.
{{Glossary:Brick}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Bridge Rectifier">Bridge Rectifier</span>
|<span id="Bridge Rectifier">Bridge Rectifier</span>
|
|
A bridge rectifier consists of four [[#Diode|diodes]] connected in a diamond shape. Applying [[#AC|AC]] to two opposite corners, you get [[#DC|DC]] out of the other two. See [[Power_supplies#Linear_Power_Supplies|Linear Power Supplies]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Bridge Rectifier}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Brush">Brush</span>
|<span id="Brush">Brush</span>
|
|
A brush in an AC/DC motor consists of a small block of graphite, a pair of which feed the current to the rotor via the [[#Commutator|commutator]]. See [[Electric_motors#DC_and_Universal_.28AC.2FDC.29_Motors|DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Brush}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Brushless Motor">Brushless Motor</span>
|<span id="Brushless Motor">Brushless Motor</span>
|
|
An Electronically Commutated or Brushless motor is a type of DC motor which uses an electronic circuit to switch the current between several coils in order to keep the rotor turning, instead of using a [[#Commutator|commutator]] and [[#Brush|brushes]] to perform this function. See [[Electric_motors#DC_and_Universal_.28AC.2FDC.29_Motors|DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Brushless Motor}}
 
|-
|<span id="Buck regulator">Buck regulator</span>
|
{{Glossary:Buck regulator}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Byte">Byte</span>
|<span id="Byte">Byte</span>
|
|
A byte or octet is 8 [[#Bit|bits]], which can be used to represent a single letter, number or punctuation mark, or a number between 0 and 255, or anything else that can have up to 256 values.
{{Glossary:Byte}}


|-
|-
Line 179: Line 194:
|<span id="Carrier">Carrier</span>
|<span id="Carrier">Carrier</span>
|
|
A carrier is a [[#RF|radio frequency]] signal which is [[#Modulation|modulated]] by an [[#AF|audio]] signal (for example) so that the audio can be transmitted by radio. 
{{Glossary:Carrier}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Capacitor">Capacitor</span>
|<span id="Capacitor">Capacitor</span>
|
|
A capacitor is an electronic component which can store electric charge. Its capacitance (or its capacity for storing charge) is measured in [[#Farad|Farads]]. An old-fashioned name for it is a condenser. See [[Basic electronic components#Capacitors|Capacitors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Capacitor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Capacitance">Capacitance</span>
|<span id="Capacitance">Capacitance</span>
|
|
Capacitance is the property of storing electric charge measured in [[#Farad|Farads]], which is the purpose of a [[#Capacitor|capacitor]].
{{Glossary:Capacitance}}


|-
|-
|Cathode
|<span id="Cathode">Cathode</span>
|
|
A cathode is a negative [[#Electrode|electrode]].
{{Glossary:Cathode}}


|-
|-
|CFL
|<span id="CFL">CFL</span>
|
|
See [[#Compact Florescent Lamp|Compact Florescent Lamp]].
{{Glossary:Compact Florescent Lamp}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Circuit">Circuit</span>
|<span id="Circuit">Circuit</span>
|
|
Electricity really hates piling up, so it will only flow if it can go all around a complete ''circuit'' and come back to where it started.
{{Glossary:Circuit}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Circuit Diagram">Circuit Diagram</span>
|<span id="Circuit Diagram">Circuit Diagram</span>
|
|
A vacuum cleaner, for example, may contain several paths or "[[#Circuit|circuits]]" around which the current can flow, and a computer may contain a huge number. A circuit diagram is a picture of all those paths (or some of them) allowing you to see how the parts are connected together and hopefully understand how it works.
{{Glossary:Circuit Diagram}}


|-
|-
|<span id="CLI">CLI</span>
|<span id="CLI">CLI</span>
|
|
A CLI or Command Line Interface is a type of user interface in which the user types commands at a prompt. Also known as a Character User Interface or [[#CUI|CUI]] (pronounced "coo-ee"). The acronym is also used in telephony to mean Calling Line Identity, i.e. the phone number initiating a call.
{{Glossary:CLI}}
 
|-
|<span id="Cloud">Cloud</span>
|
{{Glossary:Cloud}}


|-
|-
|<span id="COB">COB</span>
|<span id="COB">COB</span>
|
|
COB or Chip On Board is a method of construction in which one or more bare [[#Semiconductor|semiconductor]] chips are mounted directly on a circuit board rather than encapsulated in individual packages. It is often used in mass produced items such as calculators in which the chip is covered by a blob of black resin, and more recently to mount many [[#LED|LED]] chips on a base to form a high power lamp, or on a thin strip to make a filament type of LED lamp.
{{Glossary:COB}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Commutator">Commutator</span>
|<span id="Commutator">Commutator</span>
|
|
The commutator is the part of the rotor of an AC/DC motor which receives the current from the [[#Brush|brushes]]. See [[Electric_motors#DC_and_Universal_.28AC.2FDC.29_Motors|DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Commutator}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Compact Florescent Lamp">Compact Florescent lamp</span>
|<span id="Compact Florescent Lamp">Compact Florescent Lamp</span>
|
|
A CFL or Compact Florescent Lamp is a type of light bulb consisting of a florescent tube bent into a compact shape. More efficient than traditional [[#Filament Lamp|filament lamps]] but still falling well short of newer [[#LED|LED]] lamps. See [[Table_lamps#Types_of_bulb|Types of bulb]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Compact Florescent Lamp}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Conductor">Conductor</span>
|<span id="Conductor">Conductor</span>
|
|
A conductor is a material which conducts electricity. Metals and carbon are conductors.
{{Glossary:Conductor}}


|-
|-
|Continuity
|<span id="Continuity">Continuity</span>
|
|
Continuity refers to an intentional low [[#Resistance|resistance]] electrical path between two points in a circuit. A continuity tester is a device which tests for continuity, often giving an audible beep when continuity is detected.
{{Glossary:Continuity}}


|-
|-
|<span id="CPU">CPU</span>
|<span id="CPU">CPU</span>
|
|
The CPU or Central Processing Unit is the "brains" of a computer which executes a computer program.
{{Glossary:CPU}}


|-
|-
|Crapware
|<span id="Crapware">Crapware</span>
|
|
Crapware is a somewhat vulgar term (best not used in polite company) referring to the largely useless junk software often bundled by a manufacturer with a Windows computer or an Android tablet or phone.
{{Glossary:Crapware}}


|-
|-
|Crimp
|<span id="Crimp">Crimp</span>
|
|
A crimp is a type of connection where a wire is inserted into a tubular receptacle which is then crushed onto the wire with a special purpose crimping tool. Correctly formed, a crimped connection is generally stronger than a soldered one, and can be done faster and more reliably in a production environment.
{{Glossary:Crimp}}


|-
|-
|<span id="CRT">CRT</span>
|<span id="CRT">CRT</span>
|
|
A CRT or Cathode Ray Tube is the image-producing device in old fashioned televisions, computer monitors, radar sets and [[#Oscilloscope|oscilloscopes]]. It consists of an evacuated glass enclosure in which [[#Electron|electrons]] are fired at a fluorescent screen to create the image. Superseded by much less bulky [[#LCD|LCD]] displays.
{{Glossary:CRT}}


|-
|-
|<span id="CUI">CUI</span>
|<span id="CUI">CUI</span>
|
|
A Character User Interface or CUI is a user interface operated exclusively with a keyboard by typing commands at a prompt or selecting options from a menu. This is in contrast to a [[#GUI|Graphical User Interface]]. Also known as a Command Line Interface or [[#CLI|CLI]].
{{Glossary:CUI}}


|-
|-
|Custom ROM
|<span id="Custom ROM">Custom ROM</span>
|
|
A custom ROM is an alternative to the [[#Operating System|operating system]] provided by the vendor for a device such as a smartphone.
{{Glossary:Custom ROM}}


|-
|-
Line 275: Line 295:


|-
|-
|DAB
|<span id="DAB">DAB</span>
|
|
DAB or Digital Audio Broadcasting is the standard used for digital broadcast radio.
{{Glossary:DAB}}


|-
|-
|<span id="DC">DC</span>
|<span id="DC">DC</span>
|
|
DC or Direct Current is an electrical supply which goes in one direction only. See [[AC and DC]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:DC}}


|-
|-
|<span id="DDOS">DDOS</span>
|<span id="DDOS">DDOS</span>
|
|
A DDOS or Distributed [[#DOS|Denial of Service]] attack is one launched via many different computers across the Internet, so increasing its power and making it harder to defend against.
{{Glossary:DDOS}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Decimal">Decimal</span>
|<span id="Decimal">Decimal</span>
|
|
Decimal is the number system we commonly use in everyday life, based on the digits 0 - 9.
{{Glossary:Decimal}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Desktop Manager">Desktop Manager</span>
|<span id="Desktop Manager">Desktop Manager</span>
|
|
The Desktop Manager is that part of an [[#Operating System|operating system]] which represents the computer's applications and tools on the screen as items on a desk.
{{Glossary:Desktop Manager}}


|-
|-
|Diac
|<span id="Diac">Diac</span>
|
|
A DIAC is a 2-terminal electronic component which switches from a non-conducting to a conducting state when a certain voltage is applied, then remains conducting until the current is switched off. Commonly used in conjunction with a [[#Triac|triac]] in dimmer switches.
{{Glossary:Diac}}


|-
|-
|Dielectric
|<span id="Dielectric">Dielectric</span>
|
|
A dielectric is an [[#Insulator|insulating]] material in which the positive and negative charges in the atoms or molecules can be displaced slightly in opposite directions from their natural positions by an electric field, causing the material as a whole to exhibit an electrical charge.
{{Glossary:Dielectric}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Digital">Digital</span>
|<span id="Digital">Digital</span>
|
|
Digital is a method of representing, processing and transmitting a signal or a quantity as a number or sequence of numbers, usually expressed in binary as ones and zeros.
{{Glossary:Digital}}


|-
|-
|DIL
|<span id="DIL">DIL</span>
|
|
DIL or Dual In-Line is a type of [[#IC|IC]] packaging with 2 parallel rows of pins, designed for [[#Through-hole|through-hole]] assembly.
{{Glossary:DIL}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Diode">Diode</span>
|<span id="Diode">Diode</span>
|
|
A diode is a 2 terminal electronic component allowing a current to flow in one direction but not the other. See [[Active_components#Diodes_and_Rectifiers|Diodes and Rectifiers]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Diode}}


|-
|-
|Dipole
|<span id="Dipole">Dipole</span>
|
|
A dipole is a thing with two opposite ends, such as a magnet (with North and South poles), a molecule with a positive charge at one end and a negative charge at the other, or a type of aerial consisting of two rods placed end to end.
{{Glossary:Dipole}}


|-
|-
|Distro
|<span id="Distro">Distro</span>
|
|
A distro is a flavour of [[#Linux|Linux]] comprising a [[#Kernel|kernel]], a [[#Desktop Manager|desktop manager]] and a selection of utilities.
{{Glossary:Distro}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Demodulation">Demodulation</span>
|<span id="Demodulation">Demodulation</span>
|
|
Demodulation is the process of recovering an audio or TV signal (for example) from the [[#RF|RF]] signal received from an aerial.
{{Glossary:Demodulation}}


|-
|-
|<span id="DLP">DLP</span>
|<span id="DLP">DLP</span>
|
|
DLP or Digital Light Processing is a class of data projector using a [[#DMD|Digital Micromirror Device]] to produce the image.
{{Glossary:DLP}}


|-
|-
|<span id="DMD">DMD</span>
|<span id="DMD">DMD</span>
|
|
A DMD or Digital Micromirror Device is an imaging device containing a tiny electrically operated mirror to control the brightness of each [[#Pixel|pixel]].
{{Glossary:DMD}}


|-
|-
|DMM
|<span id="DMM">DMM</span>
|
|
A DMM or Digital Multimeter is a [[#Multimeter|Multimeter]] with digital readout.
{{Glossary:DMM}}


|-
|-
|<span id="DOA">DOA</span>
|<span id="DOA">DOA</span>
|
|
DOA or Dead on Arrival refers to a brand new item which fails to work when first unboxed and switched on.
{{Glossary:DOA}}


|-
|-
|<span id="DOS">DOS</span>
|<span id="DOS">DOS</span>
|
|
A DOS or Denial of Service attack is an attack which renders a service (such as a website) unusable for its proper purposes. See also [[#DDOS|DDOS]]. Also, a Microsoft [[#Operating System|operating system]] predating Windows, and lacking a graphical user interface.
{{Glossary:DOS}}


|-
|-
Line 368: Line 388:


|-
|-
|Earth Loop
|<span id="Earth Loop">Earth Loop</span>
|
|
See [[#Ground Loop|Ground Loop]].
{{Glossary:Ground Loop}}


|-
|-
|E-Ink
|<span id="E-Ink">E-Ink</span>
|
|
E-Ink is a type of display, usually monochrome only and commonly used in e-book readers. It has the advantage of using very little power, and can be viewed by reflected ambient light rather than needing an active backlight.
{{Glossary:E-Ink}}


|-
|-
|EHT
|<span id="EHT">EHT</span>
|
|
EHT or Extremely High Tension is the name given to the very high [[#Volt|voltage]] supply (usually in excess of 1,000V) required by [[#CRT|cathode ray tubes]] in old fashioned televisions, [[#Magnetron|magnetrons]] in microwave ovens and a few related devices. Needless to say, it can be very dangerous!
{{Glossary:EHT}}


|-
|-
|Electricity
|<span id="Electricity">Electricity</span>
|
|
Electricity: tamed magic. Well, mostly tamed.
{{Glossary:Electricity}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Electrode">Electrode</span>
|<span id="Electrode">Electrode</span>
|
|
An electrode is an electrical conductor making contact with a non-metallic part of a device such as a [[#Semiconductor|semiconductor]] or the [[#Electrolyte|electrolyte]] in a battery or the vacuum in a [[#Valve|valve]].
{{Glossary:Electrode}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Electrolyte">Electrolyte</span>
|<span id="Electrolyte">Electrolyte</span>
|
|
An electrolyte is a conducting liquid containing negative and positive [[#Ion|ions]], such as the liquid in a battery
{{Glossary:Electrolyte}}


|-
|-
|Electrolytic Capacitor
|<span id="Electrolytic Capacitor">Electrolytic Capacitor</span>
|
|
An electrolytic capacitor is a type of [[#Capacitor|capacitor]] which employs an electro-chemical process to achieve a high level of capacitance. See [[Basic electronic components#Capacitors|Capacitors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Electrolytic Capacitor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Electromagnet">Electromagnet</span>
|<span id="Electromagnet">Electromagnet</span>
|
|
An electromagnet is a coil of wire wound around an iron core. A current passing through the coil magnetises the iron for only as long as the current flows. Typically used in electro-mechanical devices such as toasters, where it holds the lever down while the toast is toasting.
{{Glossary:Electromagnet}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Electromagnetic Wave">Electromagnetic Wave</span>
|<span id="Electromagnetic Wave">Electromagnetic Wave</span>
|
|
An electromagnetic or EM wave is a kind of wave in space in which energy is continually exchanged between electric and magnetic fields similarly to how energy in a ripple on a pond is continually exchanged between gravity and momentum. Radio waves, light, x-rays and gamma rays are all EM waves of different [[#Wavelength|wavelengths]].
{{Glossary:Electromagnetic Wave}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Electron">Electron</span>
|<span id="Electron">Electron</span>
|
|
An electron is a sub-atomic particle carrying a negative electrical charge. A flow of electrons constitutes an electric current.
{{Glossary:Electron}}


|-
|-
|Electronically Commutated Motor
|<span id="Electronically Commutated Motor">Electronically Commutated Motor</span>
|
|
See [[#Brushless Motor|Brushless Motor]].
{{Glossary:Brushless Motor}}


|-
|-
|EMF
|<span id="EMF">EMF</span>
|
|
EMF or Electro-Motive Force is another term for [[#Volt|Voltage]].
{{Glossary:EMF}}


|-
|-
|Encryption
|<span id="Encryption">Encryption</span>
|
|
Encryption is the process of transforming a message or data (the "cleartext") into a completely unintelligible form (the "ciphertext"). Only with knowledge of a secret key can the ciphertext be transformed back into the cleartext.
{{Glossary:Encryption}}


|-
|-
|Epoxy
|<span id="Epoxy">Epoxy</span>
|
|
Epoxy is a type of very strong adhesive which comes as a resin and a separate hardener. It starts to set only when the two are mixed together.
{{Glossary:Epoxy}}


|-
|-
|<span id="ES">ES</span>
|<span id="ES">ES</span>
|
|
ES or Edison Screw is a screw-fitting lamp base. Several sizes are in common use. See [[Table_lamps#Types_of_bulb|Types of bulb]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:ES}}


|-
|-
|ESD
|<span id="ESD">ESD</span>
|
|
ESD or Electrostatic Discharge is static caused by friction such as shoes on a carpet, and particularly noticeable in conditions of low humidity. Even if not perceptible, it can damage sensitive electronic components.
{{Glossary:ESD}}


|-
|-
|Ethernet
|<span id="Ethernet">Ethernet</span>
|
|
Ethernet is a family of networking protocols defining several methods by which packets of data can be transmitted across a computer network.
{{Glossary:Ethernet}}


|-
|-
Line 458: Line 478:
|<span id="Farad">Farad</span>
|<span id="Farad">Farad</span>
|
|
The Farad is the unit of capacitance. Named after British scientist and experimenter [[Wikipedia:Michael_Faraday|Michael Faraday]], who made important discoveries in the fields of electromagnetism and electrochemistry. See [[Basic electronic components#Capacitors|Capacitors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Farad}}


|-
|-
|Ferrite rod aerial
|<span id="Ferrite rod aerial">Ferrite rod aerial</span>
|
|
A ferrite rod aerial is a type of aerial used for medium and long wave radio reception and consisting of a rod or block of ferrite (a magnetic but [[#Insulator|insulating]] material) with one or more coils of wire wound around it. See [[How radios work#Aerials|How radios work]] in the wiki.
{{Glossary:Ferrite rod aerial}}


|-
|-
|<span id="FET">Field Effect Transistor</span>
|<span id="FET">FET</span>
|
|
A FET or field-effect transistor is a type of [[#Transistor|transistor]] where the current flowing between two of its terminals (the source and the drain) is controlled by an electric field created by a voltage on a third terminal (the gate). See [[Active_components#Transistors|Transistors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:FET}}


|-
|-
|<span id="FFC">FFC</span>
|<span id="FFC">FFC</span>
|
|
An FFC or Flat Flexible Cable is a type of cable with parallel conducting tracks on a plastic ribbon.  Used extensively for connections between separate modules in many types of device.
{{Glossary:FFC}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Filament Lamp">Filament lamp</span>
|<span id="Filament Lamp">Filament Lamp</span>
|
|
A filament lamp is a type of light bulb containing a thin wire which glows white hot when a current is passed through it. See [[Table_lamps#Types_of_bulb|Types of bulb]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Filament Lamp}}


|-
|-
|Filing System
|<span id="Filing System">Filing System</span>
|
|
The filing system is that part of an [[#Operating System|operating system]] which manages a disk and presents it to the user as individual named files, hiding all the messy details about where on disk the data is actually stored.
{{Glossary:Filing System}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Firewall">Firewall</span>
|<span id="Firewall">Firewall</span>
|
|
A firewall is a networking device which controls the traffic passing through it according to a defined policy, typically to prevent hackers from accessing a private network, or to block maliciously crafted requests.
{{Glossary:Firewall}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Firmware">Firmware</span>
|<span id="Firmware">Firmware</span>
|
|
Firmware is the [[#Software|Software]] which is built in to the [[#Hardware|hardware]] of a computer or smart device and is expected to be rarely if ever changed.
{{Glossary:Firmware}}


|-
|-
|Flash
|<span id="Flash">Flash</span>
|
|
Flash is a term used for a type of memory that can only be changed by erasing and rewriting a substantial block of cells at a time. Flashing is used as a verb for the process of rewriting or updating such a memory.
{{Glossary:Flash}}


|-
|-
|Flux
|<span id="Flux">Flux</span>
|
|
Flux is a liquid or paste which helps to remove oxide or other deposits in order to make good solder joints. Only usually needed for challenging soldering jobs such as [[#Surface_Mount|surface mount]] as solder normally contains a core of flux.
{{Glossary:Flux}}


|-
|-
|FM
|<span id="FM">FM</span>
|
|
FM or Frequency Modulation is a method of [[#Modulation|modulation]] in which the [[#Frequency|frequency]] of an [[#RF|RF]] signal is modulated by the [[#AF|AF]] signal to be transmitted. See [[How_radios_work#Frequency_Modulation_.28FM.29|Frequency Modulation]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:FM}}


|-
|-
|<span id="FPC">FPC</span>
|<span id="FPC">FPC</span>
|
|
An FPC or Flexible Printed Circuit. A flexible substrate with printed circuit tracks, generally brown or dark orange, and often having [[#Surface_Mount|surface mount]] components or connectors soldered directly onto it.
{{Glossary:FPC}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Frequency">Frequency</span>
|<span id="Frequency">Frequency</span>
|
|
Frequency is the number of complete (positive and negative) cycles of [[#AC|AC]] which occur per second. Measured in [[#Hertz|Hertz]].
{{Glossary:Frequency}}


|-
|-
|Full wave rectifier
|<span id="Full wave rectifier">Full wave rectifier</span>
|
|
A full wave [[#Rectifier|rectifier]] is one that which uses both the positive and negative half cycles of the [[#AC|AC]] input to produce a [[#DC|DC]] output. Most often this is achieved with a [[#Bridge Rectifier|bridge rectifier]].
{{Glossary:Full wave rectifier}}


|-
|-
|Fuse
|<span id="Fuse">Fuse</span>
|
|
A fuse is a thin piece of low melting point wire designed to melt and so break the circuit if too much current flows due to a fault.
{{Glossary:Fuse}}


|-
|-
Line 536: Line 556:
|<span id="Germanium">Germanium</span>
|<span id="Germanium">Germanium</span>
|
|
Germanium is a [[#Semiconductor|semiconductor]] used for the manufacture of early transistors, but superseded by silicon. It is now mainly in solar cells and LEDs.
{{Glossary:Germanium}}


|-
|-
|<span id="GB">GB</span>
|<span id="GB">GB</span>
|
|
A GB or Gigabyte is 1000 [[#MB|megabytes]], but the term is often used for 1024 [[#MB|megabytes]], more properly written GiB.
{{Glossary:GB}}


|-
|-
|<span id="GHz">GHz</span>
|<span id="GHz">GHz</span>
|
|
A GHz is a billion (thousand million) [[#Hertz|Hz]]
{{Glossary:GHz}}


|-
|-
|<span id="GiB">GiB</span>
|<span id="GiB">GiB</span>
|
|
A GiB is 1,024[[#MiB|MiB]], or 1,073,741,825 [[#Byte|bytes]]. It is as much as can be addressed with 30 [[#Bit|bits]].
{{Glossary:GiB}}


|-
|-
|<span id="GPT">GPT</span>
|<span id="GPT">GPT</span>
|
|
GPT or [[#GUID|GUID]] Partition Table is the name given to a newer method of organising the contents of a disk. See[[UEFI_and_GPT#MBR_vs_GPT_disk_layout|MBR vs GPT disk layout]] in the wiki.
{{Glossary:GPT}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Grid">Grid</span>
|<span id="Grid">Grid</span>
|
|
The grid is the control electrode in a [[#Valve|valve]]. Driving it negative with respect to the [[#Cathode|cathode]] restricts or prevents a flow of electrons from the [[#Cathode|cathode]] to the [[#Anode|anode]].
{{Glossary:Grid}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Ground loop">Ground Loop</span>
|<span id="Ground loop">Ground Loop</span>
|
|
When two pieces of audio equipment are connected together, each having its own earth connection, some of the small current that should be going from one of the pieces of equipment to its own earth connection instead goes via the connection to the other equipment's earth, causing an objectionable [[#Hum|hum]] in the audio output. This is known as a Ground or Earth Loop.
{{Glossary:Ground Loop}}


|-
|-
|<span id="GUI">GUI</span>
|<span id="GUI">GUI</span>
|
|
A GUI (pronounced "goo-ey") or Graphical User Interface is a user interface operated principally using a graphical display and a mouse or other pointing device, as opposed to a [[#CUI|Character User Interface]], operated just by a keyboard and text on a display.
{{Glossary:GUI}}


|-
|-
|<span id="GUID">GUID</span>
|<span id="GUID">GUID</span>
|
|
A GUID or Globally Unique Identifier is a 128 [[#Bit|bit]] number used for identifying various types of resource in a computer system. A 128 bit number is so large that if you choose one at random, there is practically no chance that anyone else will ever pick the same one, even if you were to wait billions of years.
{{Glossary:GUID}}


|-
|-
Line 582: Line 602:


|-
|-
|Half wave rectifier
|<span id="Half wave rectifier">Half wave rectifier</span>
|
|
A half wave [[#Rectifier|rectifier]] is one which uses only the positive (or the negative) half cycles of the [[#AC|AC]] input to produce a [[#DC|DC]] output, by using a single [[#Diode|diode]].
{{Glossary:Half wave rectifier}}


|-
|-
|Hall Effect
|<span id="Hall Effect">Hall Effect</span>
|
|
When a current flows through a conductor and a magnetic field is applied to the conductor at right angles, the current tends to be pushed to one side of the conductor, at right angles to the magnetic field. This is the Hall Effect. Used in a Hall effect device to detect or measure a magnetic field, for example in smartphones to detect the earth's magnetic field to implement a compass.
{{Glossary:Hall Effect}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Halogen Lamp">Halogen Lamp</span>
|<span id="Halogen Lamp">Halogen Lamp</span>
|
|
A halogen lamp is an improved form of [[#Filament Lamp|filament lamp]] with longer life and better efficiency, but still falling far short of [[#Compact Florescent Lamp|compact florescent]] and [[#LED|LED]] lamps. See [[Table_lamps#Types_of_bulb|Types of bulb]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Halogen Lamp}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Hard Disk">Hard Disk</span>
|<span id="Hard Disk">Hard Disk</span>
|
|
A hard disk or HD is a common type of computer main long term storage in which data is held on a rapidly spinning magnetic disk. (Increasingly, modern computers use a [[#Solid State Disk|Solid State Disk]] instead.)
{{Glossary:Hard Disk}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Hardware">Hardware</span>
|<span id="Hardware">Hardware</span>
|
|
Hardware is the physical electronic and electromechanical parts which comprise a computer.
{{Glossary:Hardware}}


|-
|-
|HD
|<span id="HD">HD</span>
|
|
See [[#Hard Disk|Hard Disk]]
{{Glossary:Hard Disk}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Heat Sink">Heat Sink</span>
|<span id="Heat Sink">Heat Sink</span>
|
|
A heat sink is a piece of metal designed to conduct heat away from a component so as to prevent it getting too hot. When soldering, a pair of pliers can be applied to a lead of a sensitive electronic component as a heat sink to prevent the heat of the solder from damaging the component.
{{Glossary:Heat Sink}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Henry">Henry</span>
|<span id="Henry">Henry</span>
|
|
The Henry is the unit of inductance. Named after American scientist [[Wikipedia:Joseph Henry|Joseph Henry]], who made important discoveries in the field of electromagnetism (independantly of Michael Faraday). See [[Basic electronic components#Inductors|Inductors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Henry}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Hertz">Hertz</span>
|<span id="Hertz">Hertz</span>
|
|
The Hertz (Hz) is the unit of [[#Frequency|frequency]], numerically equal to cycles per second. Named after German physicist [[Wikipedia:Heinrich_Hertz|Heinrich Hertz]], who was the first to prove the existence of previously theorised [[#Electromagnetic_Wave|electromagnetic waves]].
{{Glossary:Hertz}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Hexadecimal">Hexadecimal</span>
|<span id="Hexadecimal">Hexadecimal</span>
|
|
Hexadecimal is a number system based on 16 digits which are represented by 0-9 and A - F. This is useful because each hexadecimal digit can represent 4 [[#Bit|bits]], and 2 hexadecimal digits can represent 8 bits or a [[#Byte|byte]].
{{Glossary:Hexadecimal}}


|-
|-
|Hole
|<span id="Hole">Hole</span>
|
|
A hole is the lack of an [[#Electron|electron]] in a crystal lattice where there should be one. This leaves behind a positive charge. An electron from an adjacent atom can move into the hole causing the hole to move to the next atom. In this way, holes can act like positively charged particles and carry an electric current.
{{Glossary:Hole}}


|-
|-
|HT
|<span id="HT">HT</span>
|
|
HT or High Tension is the name given to the main high [[#Volt|voltage]] supply required by [[#Valve|valve]] equipment, usually in the region of several hundred volts. Warning: this can be dangerous!
{{Glossary:HT}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Hum">Hum</span>
|<span id="Hum">Hum</span>
|
|
Hum is a constant low frequency sound in the output of audio equipment due (for example) to inadequate [[#Smoothing|smoothing]] in the [[#Power Supply|power supply]] and residual [[#Ripple|ripple]] in its output, or to the presence of a [[#Ground loop|ground loop]].
{{Glossary:Hum}}


|-
|-
|Hz
|<span id="Hz">Hz</span>
|
|
See [[#Hertz|Hertz]].
{{Glossary:Hertz}}


|-
|-
Line 657: Line 677:
|<span id="IC">IC</span>
|<span id="IC">IC</span>
|
|
See [[#Integrated Circuit|Integrated Circuit]].
{{Glossary:Integrated Circuit}}


|-
|-
|IF
|<span id="IF">IF</span>
|
|
IF or Intermediate Frequency is a [[#Frequency|frequency]] between the [[#RF|RF]] and [[#AF|AF]] in a [[#Superhet|superhet]] radio at which most of the amplification and selection of the required station occurs.
{{Glossary:IF}}
 
|-
|<span id="IGBT">IGBT</span>
|
{{Glossary:IGBT}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Impedance">Impedance</span>
|<span id="Impedance">Impedance</span>
|
|
For most practical purposes, impedance is the same as [[#Resistance|resistance]], and also measured in [[#Ohm|ohms]]. Resistance is the number of steady volts you need to push a steady amp through a circuit, but if the voltage is [[#AC|AC]] or is varying, then [[#Inductance|inductance]] and [[#Capacitance|capacitance]] add a kind of momentum and springiness to the way the current responds to the voltage. The volts per amp is then likely to be different, and is termed impedance.
{{Glossary:Impedance}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Inductance">Inductance</span>
|<span id="Inductance">Inductance</span>
|
|
Inductance is the property of a coil of wire (or even a straight piece of wire) of storing energy in the form of a magnetic field generated by a current flowing through it. It is measured in [[#Henry|Henrys]]. When the voltage driving it is reduced or withdrawn, this energy is released back into the current, giving it a kind of momentum and tending to keep it flowing.
{{Glossary:Inductance}}


|-
|-
|Induction motor
|<span id="Induction motor">Induction motor</span>
|
|
An induction motor is a type of electric motor which runs only on [[#AC|AC]]. Often used in fans. See [[Electric_motors#Induction_Motors|Induction Motors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Induction motor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Inductor">Inductor</span>
|<span id="Inductor">Inductor</span>
|
|
An inductor is a coil of wire, very often wound around a magnetic core, providing a kind of momentum to the flow of electricity. Its inductance is measured in [[#Henry|Henrys]]. See [[Basic electronic components#Inductors|Inductors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Inductor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Inrush">Inrush</span>
|<span id="Inrush">Inrush</span>
|
|
Inrush is a momentary surge of current drawn by a device on first switching it on, often causing a noticeable dimming of lights for a fraction of a second. Some equipment is fitted with a slow blow fuse to withstand the inrush. Items containing a large electric motor often have a significant inrush current as the motor starts.
{{Glossary:Inrush}}


|-
|-
|Insulation displacement
|<span id="Insulation displacement">Insulation displacement</span>
|
|
Insulation displacement is a type of connection where insulated wire, without stripping the insulation, is forced into a slot with sharp inner edges. These edges cut through the insulation and bite into the wire. Commonly used on telephone and network connectors, and connectors designed for attachment to ribbon cables.
{{Glossary:Insulation displacement}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Insulator">Insulator</span>
|<span id="Insulator">Insulator</span>
|
|
An insulator is a material which doesn't conduct electricity. Examples are plastic, wood, glass and fresh air.
{{Glossary:Insulator}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Integrated Circuit">Integrated Circuit</span>
|<span id="Integrated Circuit">Integrated Circuit</span>
|
|
An Integrated Circuit or IC is a circuit comprising anything from dozens to billions of electronic components, all fabricated on a single silicon chip. See [[Active_components#Integrated_Circuits|Integrated Circuits]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Integrated Circuit}}


|-
|-
|<span id="International Octal">International Octal</span>
|<span id="International Octal">International Octal</span>
|
|
IO or International Octal was a type of 8-pin [[#Valve|valve]] base with a keyed spigot, used on older and larger [[#Valve|valves]], and often referred to simply as "octal".
{{Glossary:International Octal}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Internet">Internet</span>
|<span id="Internet">Internet</span>
|
|
The Internet is a global computer network in which (unlike the telephone network) information is transmitted as relatively small packets of data, each packet individually addressed and individually routed to its destination. Many different services use this foundation, two of the best known being the World Wide Web (which delivers web pages) and email.
{{Glossary:Internet}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Internet of Things">Internet of Things</span>
|<span id="Internet of Things">Internet of Things</span>
|
|
The Internet of Things (or IoT) refers to the networking of smart devices which have not traditionally been thought of as computers, such as vehicles, security cameras, home heating systems, kitchen appliances and medical devices, as well as industrial machines and sensors. As a result, they can be remotely monitored and controlled or can feed data back to a service provider. However, if they are not properly secured (as is often the case) they can represent a serious security risk.
{{Glossary:Internet of Things}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Intranet">Intranet</span>
|<span id="Intranet">Intranet</span>
|
|
An intranet is a computer network using the same technology as the [[#Internet|Internet]] but existing only within the confines of a particular company or organisation. However, most intranets have a gateway through which users can access the wider Internet, usually subject to certain restrictions.
{{Glossary:Intranet}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Ion">Ion</span>
|<span id="Ion">Ion</span>
|
|
An ion is a positively or negatively charged atom.
{{Glossary:Ion}}


|-
|-
|<span id="IoT">IoT</span>
|<span id="IoT">IoT</span>
|
|
See [[#Internet of Things|Internet of Things]].
{{Glossary:Internet of Things}}


|-
|-
|<span id="IP">IP</span>
|<span id="IP">IP</span>
|
|
IP or Internet Protocol is a set of standards defining how data (whether it be it web pages, emails or anything else), broken up into individually addressed packets, is moved across the Internet from a source to a destination. The Internet mainly uses Version 4 (IPv4) but the number of possible IPv4 addresses has been virtually exhausted. Version 6 (IPv6) provides a vastly increased number of addresses but has yet to see wide scale adoption on the Internet as a whole since interoperation is not straightforward.
{{Glossary:IP}}
 
|-
|<span id="ISO">ISO</span>
|
{{Glossary:ISO}}


|-
|-
Line 743: Line 773:


|-
|-
|Jack
|<span id="Jack">Jack</span>
|
|
A jack is the type of plug (and its socket) familiar as a headphone plug.
{{Glossary:Jack}}


|-
|-
|jFET
|<span id="jFET">jFET</span>
|
|
A Junction Field Effect Transistor is a type of [[#FET|field effect transistor]] where the gate is formed by a [[#Semiconductor|semiconductor]] junction. See [[Active_components#Transistors|Transistors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:jFET}}


|-
|-
|Joule
|<span id="Joule">Joule</span>
|
|
The joule is the unit of energy, being the amount of work done by 1 [[#Watt|watt]] in 1 second. 4.2 Joules are equivalent to 1 calorie of heat. The unit is named after English physicist  [[Wikipedia:James_Prescott_Joule|James Prescott Joule]], best known for discovering the law which states how much heat is produced in a conductor by the passage of an electric current.
{{Glossary:Joule}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Junction Transistor">Junction Transistor</span>
|<span id="Junction Transistor">Junction Transistor</span>
|
|
A bipolar or junction transistor is a type of [[#Transistor|transistor]] with 3 [[#Semiconductor|semiconductor]] layers. See [[Active_components#Transistors|Transistors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Junction Transistor}}


|-
|-
Line 768: Line 798:
|<span id="kB">kB</span>
|<span id="kB">kB</span>
|
|
A Kilobyte (kB) is 1024 [[#Byte|bytes]].
{{Glossary:kB}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Kernel">Kernel</span>
|<span id="Kernel">Kernel</span>
|
|
The core of an [[#Operating System|operating system]], which concerns itself with managing the [[#Hardware|hardware]] resources at the lowest level. It normally has no user interface, this being provided by another program or programs referred to as the [[#Shell|shell]]. Think of a nut. The shell is what you see but the goodness is inside in the kernel.
{{Glossary:Kernel}}


|-
|-
|Keylogger
|<span id="Keylogger">Keylogger</span>
|
|
A keylogger is a type of [[#Malware|malware]] or a hardware device which logs your keystrokes (including passwords, credit card numbers etc.) and sends them back to a malicious party, or stores them for later collection.
{{Glossary:Keylogger}}


|-
|-
|<span id="kHz">kHz</span>
|<span id="kHz">kHz</span>
|
|
A kHz is 1,000 [[#Hertz|Hz]]
{{Glossary:kHz}}


|-
|-
Line 791: Line 821:
|<span id="LAN">LAN</span>
|<span id="LAN">LAN</span>
|
|
A Local Area Network is a computer network covering a limited area such as a single building, or at most, a campus.
{{Glossary:LAN}}


|-
|-
|<span id="LCD">LCD</span>
|<span id="LCD">LCD</span>
|
|
A Liquid Crystal Display is the type of display used in most calculators, phones, tablets and computer monitors. It uses a special liquid which acts on polarised light under an electric field.
{{Glossary:LCD}}


|-
|-
|LDR
|<span id="LDR">LDR</span>
|
|
A Light Dependant Resistor is a device having a high [[#Resistance|resistance]] in the dark but whose resistance falls with increasing illumination.
{{Glossary:LDR}}


|-
|-
|<span id="LED">LED</span>
|<span id="LED">LED</span>
|
|
A LED is a Light Emitting [[#Diode|Diode]], similar to any other [[#Semiconductor|semiconductor]] diode but specially crafted so that [[#Photon|photons]] are emitted as [[#Electron|electrons]] fall into [[#Holes|holes]] at the junction between a [[#P-type|p-type]] and an [[#N-type|n-type]] region.
{{Glossary:LED}}


|-
|-
|Linear Regulator
|<span id="Linear Regulator">Linear Regulator</span>
|
|
A linear regulator is a [[#Circuit|circuit]] often in the form of an [[#IC|IC]] which produces a constant well defined [[#Volt|voltage]] from a variable or poorly defined higher voltage input, simply by absorbing excess voltage and turning it into heat. See [[Power_supplies#Linear_Power_Supplies|Linear Power Supplies]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Linear Regulator}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Linux">Linux</span>
|<span id="Linux">Linux</span>
|
|
Linux is a free, open source [[#Operating System|operating system]] [[#Kernel|kernel]] which, packaged into a [[#Distro|distro]], can be used as an alternative to Windows or OS/X.
{{Glossary:Linux}}


|-
|-
|Live Linux
|<span id="Live Linux">Live Linux</span>
|
|
A live linux is a [[#Linux|Linux]] system on a bootable CD/DVD or memory stick which can be run from that media without affecting the installed [[#Operating System|operating system]] on the [[#Hard Disk|hard disk]].
{{Glossary:Live Linux}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Li-ion">L-ion</span>
|<span id="Li-ion">Li-ion</span>
|
|
Lithium-ion and lithium-polymer are types of high capacity rechargeable battery much used in portable electronic devices and electric vehicles. See [[Batteries|Batteries]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Li-ion}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Li-polymer">L-polymer</span>
|<span id="Li-polymer">Li-polymer</span>
|
|
See [[#Li-ion|Li-ion]].
{{Glossary:Li-ion}}


|-
|-
|Load cell
|<span id="Load cell">Load cell</span>
|
|
A load cell is a device for measuring a force and presenting it as an electrical signal. See [[Digital weighing scales|Digital weighing scales]] in the wiki.
{{Glossary:Load cell}}


|-
|-
|Loupe
|<span id="Loupe">Loupe</span>
|
|
A loupe is a magnifying glass, generally without a handle. Jewellers and watchmakers commonly use an eye loupe, which with a little practice can be held in the eye socket, leaving both hands free.
{{Glossary:Loupe}}


|-
|-
|LT
|<span id="LT">LT</span>
|
|
LT or Low Tension is the name given to the low [[#Volt|voltage]] supply required by [[#Valve|valve]] equipment to heat the cathodes of the valves. A common value is 6.3V.
{{Glossary:LT}}


|-
|-
Line 854: Line 884:
|<span id="Magnetron">Magnetron</span>
|<span id="Magnetron">Magnetron</span>
|
|
A magnetron is the device which produces the microwaves in a microwave oven, originally developed during WWII as a small and high powered source of microwaves for radar applications. A strong magnet causes a stream of [[#Electron|electrons]] to circle around a series of cavities causing them to resonate electrically in much the same way as blowing across the top of a bottle can make it resonate.
{{Glossary:Magnetron}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Malware">Malware</span>
|<span id="Malware">Malware</span>
|
|
Malware is a term used for any bad piece of software which attempts to get onto your computer for malicious purposes.
{{Glossary:Malware}}


|-
|-
|<span id="MB">MB</span>
|<span id="MB">MB</span>
|
|
A MB or megabyte is 1000 [[#kB|kilobytes]], but the term is often used for 1024 [[#kB|kilobytes]], which is more properly written MiB.
{{Glossary:MB}}


|-
|-
|<span id="MBR">MBR</span>
|<span id="MBR">MBR</span>
|
|
The MBR or Master Boot Record is the name given to an older method of organising the contents of a disk. See [[UEFI_and_GPT#MBR_vs_GPT_disk_layout|MBR vs GPT disk layout]] in the wiki.
{{Glossary:MBR}}
 
|-
|<span id="Metal Halide Lamp">Metal Halide Lamp</span>
|
{{Glossary:Metal Halide Lamp}}


|-
|-
|<span id="MHz">MHz</span>
|<span id="MHz">MHz</span>
|
|
A MHz is a million [[#Hertz|Hz]]
{{Glossary:MHz}}


|-
|-
|<span id="MiB">MiB</span>
|<span id="MiB">MiB</span>
|
|
A MiB is 1,048,576 [[#Byte|bytes]], the amount that can be addressed with 20 [[#Bit|bits]].
{{Glossary:MiB}}


|-
|-
|Modem
|<span id="Modem">Modem</span>
|
|
A modem or "modulator/demodulator" is a device used to perform 2-way conversion of a data stream between [[#Digital|digital]] and [[#Analogue|analogue]] forms, for example to communicate data over a voice or broadband (analogue) connection.
{{Glossary:Modem}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Modulation">Modulation</span>
|<span id="Modulation">Modulation</span>
|
|
Modulation is the process of impressing an audio or TV signal (for example) onto an [[#RF|RF]] signal for transmission. See [[How_radios_work|How radios work]] in the wiki.
{{Glossary:Modulation}}


|-
|-
|MOSFET
|<span id="MOSFET">MOSFET</span>
|
|
A MOSFET or Metal Oxide Field Effect Transistor is a type of [[#FET|field effect transistor]] where the gate is formed by metal deposited on an extremely thin insulating oxide layer. See [[Active_components#Transistors|Transistors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:MOSFET}}


|-
|-
|<span id="MOV">MOV</span>
|<span id="MOV">MOV</span>
|
|
An MOV or Metal Oxide Varistor is the commonest type of [[#Varistor|Varistor]].
{{Glossary:MOV}}


|-
|-
|<span id="MTBF">MTBF</span>
|<span id="MTBF">MTBF</span>
|
|
MTBF or Mean Time Between Failures is a measure of the reliability of an item, most usually measured in hours (or thousands of hours).
{{Glossary:MTBF}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Multimeter">Multimeter</span>
|<span id="Multimeter">Multimeter</span>
|
|
A multimeter is an electrical test instrument which measures voltage, current, resistance and often several other things. Most usually they have a digital readout but analogue ones with a dial are also available.
{{Glossary:Multimeter}}


|-
|-
Line 917: Line 952:
|<span id="N-type">N-type</span>
|<span id="N-type">N-type</span>
|
|
N-type is the name given to [[#Semiconductor|Semiconductor]] material doped with an impurity whose atoms have one too many [[#Electron|electrons]] to match the crystal lattice. These can carry an electric current as negative charges.
{{Glossary:N-type}}


|-
|-
|<span id="NiCd">NiCd</span>
|<span id="NiCd">NiCd</span>
|
|
NiCd or Nickel Cadmium is a type of rechargeable battery, similar in many ways to [[#NiMH|Nickel Metal Hydride]] but with higher maximum charge and discharge rates making it suitable for power tools and radio controlled models, and having greater tolerance to abuse, but suffering from a "memory effect" and containing toxic cadmium. See [[Batteries|Batteries]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:NiCd}}


|-
|-
|<span id="NiMH">NiMH</span>
|<span id="NiMH">NiMH</span>
|
|
NiMH or Nickel Metal Hydride is a type of rechargeable battery, similar in many ways to [[#NiCd|Nickel Cadmium]] but with greater capacity, reduced "memory effect" and containing no toxic cadmium, but having a higher self-discharge rate. See [[Batteries|Batteries]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:NiMH}}


|-
|-
|NPN
|<span id="NPN">NPN</span>
|
|
A type of [[#Junction Transistor|junction transistor]] comprising a [[#P-type|P-type]] layer sandwiched between two [[#N-type|N-type]] layers.
{{Glossary:NPN}}
 
|-
|<span id="NTC Resistor">NTC Resistor</span>
|
{{Glossary:NTC Resistor}}


|-
|-
Line 940: Line 980:
|<span id="Object Code">Object Code</span>
|<span id="Object Code">Object Code</span>
|
|
[[#Software|Software]] in a form that can be directly executed by a computer, but is virtually unintelligible to humans, simply comprising [[#Binary|binary]] numbers.
{{Glossary:Object Code}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Octal">Octal</span>
|<span id="Octal">Octal</span>
|
|
A number system based on only 8 digits 0 - 7. This is useful because each octal digit can represent 3 [[#Bit|bits]]. See also [[#International Octal|International Octal]] (a type of [[#Valve|valve]] base).
{{Glossary:Octal}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Octet">Octet</span>
|<span id="Octet">Octet</span>
|
|
See [[#Byte|Byte]].
{{Glossary:Byte}}


|-
|-
|<span id="OEM">OEM</span>
|<span id="OEM">OEM</span>
|
|
Original Equipment Manufacturer. A somewhat confusing term generally meaning a company which sells another company's manufactured goods under its own branding and with its own warranty. Also used of software, for a licence allowing a computer manufacturer to install the software on systems they build.(In fact, the manufacturer could be you, building a computer from standard parts.)
{{Glossary:OEM}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Ohm">Ohm (Ω)</span>
|<span id="Ohm">Ohm</span>
|
|
A bit like friction, the Ohm is the unit of resistance to flow of electricity. Named after German mathematician and physicist [[Wikipedia:Georg_Ohm|Georg Simon Ohm]], chiefly remembered for discovering [[#Ohm's Law|Ohm's Law]]. See [[Electric circuits, volts amps watts and ohms]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Ohm}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Ohm's Law">Ohm's Law</span>
|<span id="Ohm's Law">Ohm's Law</span>
|
|
The amount of current (Amps) flowing in a circuit is the pressure (Volts) divided by the resistance (Ohms), or I = V / R.
{{Glossary:Ohm's Law}}


|-
|-
|<span id="OLED">OLED</span>
|<span id="OLED">OLED</span>
|
|
Organic Light Emitting Diode. A light emitting diode using an organic (i.e. carbon-based chemical) [[#Semiconductor|semiconductor]] rather than one based on inorganic materials such as silicon or a compound of gallium. Also used to refer to a display made up of many OLEDs.
{{Glossary:OLED}}


|-
|-
|Open Circuit
|<span id="Open Circuit">Open Circuit</span>
|
|
Electricity likes to go all the way round a circuit and back to where it started. When there is a break in the circuit preventing the current from flowing (maybe due to a fault) this is termed an open circuit.
{{Glossary:Open Circuit}}


|-
|-
|Open Source
|<span id="Open Source">Open Source</span>
|
|
[[#Software|Software]] or [[#Hardware|hardware]] the [[#Source Code|source code]] or design of which is non-proprietary and made freely available for anyone to inspect or modify for their own purposes.
{{Glossary:Open Source}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Operating System">Operating System</span>
|<span id="Operating System">Operating System</span>
|
|
The [[#Software|software]] which manages the computing, storage and communications resources of a computer, and presents a user interface allowing the user to run and interact with programs as desired.
{{Glossary:Operating System}}


|-
|-
|Opto coupler
|<span id="Opto coupler">Opto coupler</span>
|
|
An [[#LED|LED]] and a [[#Phototransistor|phototransistor]], electrically isolated but in a single packaged. Used for signalling between two [[#Circuit|circuits]] which must have no electrical connection between them.
{{Glossary:Opto coupler}}


|-
|-
|Oscillator
|<span id="Oscillator">Oscillator</span>
|
|
A [[#Circuit|circuit]] which produces an [[#AC|AC]] output at a chosen [[#Frequency|frequency]].
{{Glossary:Oscillator}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Oscilloscope">Oscilloscope</span>
|<span id="Oscilloscope">Oscilloscope</span>
|
|
A device for producing a graphical representation of how an electrical signal varies with time.
{{Glossary:Oscilloscope}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Own">Own</span>
|<span id="Own">Own</span>
|
|
In hacker parlance, to gain full control of a device or computer through subversive means. See also [[#Pwn|Pwn]].
{{Glossary:Own}}


|-
|-
Line 1,013: Line 1,053:
|<span id="P-type">P-type</span>
|<span id="P-type">P-type</span>
|
|
P-type is the name given to a [[#Semiconductor|Semiconductor]] material doped with an impurity whose atoms have one too few [[#Electron|electrons]] to match the crystal lattice. These result in [[#Hole|holes]] which can effectively move about and carry an electric current as positive charges. Think of bubbles in a liquid. These "holes" in the liquid effectively have a negative weight, so tending to rise against gravity.
{{Glossary:P-type}}


|-
|-
|<span id="PAN">PAN</span>
|<span id="PAN">PAN</span>
|
|
A PAN is a Personal Area Network, i.e. a computer network linking a single person's devices, typically covering, at most, a single room.
{{Glossary:PAN}}


|-
|-
|Partition
|<span id="Partition">Partition</span>
|
|
A partition is a subdivision of a disk. Under the control of the [[#Operating System|operating system]], a disk can be sliced up like a cake into several such partitions, each being dedicated to a particular purpose. Otherwise, you would have to install another physical disk for each purpose. Also, large computers are sometimes made to pretend to be several independent smaller ones, and these can also be referred to as partitions.
{{Glossary:Partition}}


|-
|-
|Password Manager
|<span id="Password Manager">Password Manager</span>
|
|
A password manager is a program or app which stores all your passwords in an encrypted vault under a (hopefully) strong master password. Many password managers will also generate and remember totally random unguessable passwords, and automatically apply them to login password prompts.
{{Glossary:Password Manager}}


|-
|-
|PAT Test
|<span id="PAT Test">PAT Test</span>
|
|
A PAT or Portable Appliance Test is a basic electrical safety test which should be applied to all mains operated electrical equipment before and after attempting a repair. It comprises a visual inspection and an automated test. See [[PAT testing]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:PAT Test}}


|-
|-
|<span id="PCB">PCB</span>
|<span id="PCB">PCB</span>
|
|
A PCB or printed circuit board is a board on which conductive copper tracks are used to make the connections between the components, rather than individual wires.
{{Glossary:PCB}}


|-
|-
|PD
|<span id="PD">PD</span>
|
|
PD or Potential Difference is a difference of [[#Volt|voltage]] between two points in a [[#Circuit|circuit]].
{{Glossary:PD}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Peltier">Peltier</span>
|<span id="Peltier">Peltier</span>
|
|
The Peltier effect is a thermo-electric effect by which a junction between two different conductors or semiconductors warms if a current is passed through it in one direction and cools if it is passed in the opposite direction. The converse of the [[#Seebeck|Seebeck]] effect. Used for cooling in mini fridges.
{{Glossary:Peltier}}


|-
|-
|Pentode
|<span id="Pentode">Pentode</span>
|
|
A pentode is a [[#Valve|valve]] with 5 electrodes: an [[#Anode|anode]], a [[#Cathode|cathode]] and 3 [[#Grid|grids]]: a control grid (as in a [[#Triode|triode]]), a screen grid to reduce stray interaction between the control grid and the anode, and a suppressor grid which ensures that [[#electron|electrons]] hitting the anode stay there.
{{Glossary:Pentode}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Phillips">Phillips</span>
|<span id="Phillips">Phillips</span>
|
|
Phillips is a type of cross-head screw or screwdriver, similar to but not quite the same as [[#Pozidriv|Pozidriv]].
{{Glossary:Phillips}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Phishing">Phishing</span>
|<span id="Phishing">Phishing</span>
|
|
Phishing is the criminal practice of sending emails or messages through social media inviting the recipient to open a malicious attachment or visit a malicious website.
{{Glossary:Phishing}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Photon">Photon</span>
|<span id="Photon">Photon</span>
|
|
A photon is a particle of light. Light has both wave-like and particle-like properties as described by Quantum Mechanics. If you don't understand that, don't worry. Nobody understands Quantum Mechanics.
{{Glossary:Photon}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Phototransistor">Phototransistor</span>
|<span id="Phototransistor">Phototransistor</span>
|
|
A phototransistor is a light-sensitive [[#Transistor|transistor]] used for sensing light.
{{Glossary:Phototransistor}}


|-
|-
|Piezo
|<span id="Piezo">Piezo</span>
|
|
The piezo-electric effect is the property of some materials to develop a voltage across two opposite faces when a physical force is applied, or to stretch or squeeze slightly if a voltage is applied. Pronounced "pee-ayzo" by some and "pee-zo" by others. The Oxford Dictionary allows either, but wars have been started over less contentious issues. Used in some microphones and earpieces, quartz crystal [[#Frequency|frequency]] standards, and gas lighters.
{{Glossary:Piezo}}


|-
|-
|Pinout
|<span id="Pinout">Pinout</span>
|
|
The pinout is a term used for the definition of the connections to each of the pins of a plug, a socket or an electronic component such as an [[#IC|integrated circuit]] with multiple connections.
{{Glossary:Pinout}}


|-
|-
|PIR
|<span id="PIR">PIR</span>
|
|
A PIR or Passive Infrared detector is a device which detects heat radiation from warm bodies. Often used to turn on an outdoor security light, or to allow a room light to be turned off automatically when no one is there.
{{Glossary:PIR}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Pixel">Pixel</span>
|<span id="Pixel">Pixel</span>
|
|
A pixel is an individual picture element, or coloured (or black and white) dot, thousands or millions of which make up a digital image.
{{Glossary:Pixel}}


|-
|-
|PNP
|<span id="PNP">PNP</span>
|
|
PNP is a type of [[#Junction Transistor|junction transistor]] comprising a thin [[#N-type|N-type]] layer sandwiched between two [[#P-type|P-type]] layers.
{{Glossary:PNP}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Pot">Pot</span>
|<span id="Pot">Pot</span>
|
|
See [[#Potentiometer|Potentiometer]].
{{Glossary:Potentiometer}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Potentiometer">Potentiometer</span>
|<span id="Potentiometer">Potentiometer</span>
|
|
A potentiometer (commonly known as a pot) is a[[#Resistor|resistor]] with a slider that can be moved along its length from one end to the other to tap off any required amount of resistance, for example for a volume control. See [[Basic electronic components#Potentiometers|Potentiometer]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Potentiometer}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Power Supply">Power Supply</span>
|<span id="Power Supply">Power Supply</span>
|
|
A PSU or Power Supply Unit is that part of a piece of equipment which takes the raw input power, for example from a battery or from the mains, conditions it, and delivers it at the [[#Volt|voltage(s)]] the equipment needs internally.
{{Glossary:Power Supply}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Pozidriv">Pozidriv</span>
|<span id="Pozidriv">Pozidriv</span>
|
|
Pozidriv is a type of cross-head screw or screwdriver, similar to but not quite the same as [[#Phillips|Phillips]].
{{Glossary:Pozidriv}}


|-
|-
|PPE
|<span id="PPE">PPE</span>
|
|
PPE or Personal Protective Equipment is equipment such as safety glasses, dust and fumes extractors, respirators, ear plugs, protective clothing etc. used for protection against health and safety hazards.
{{Glossary:PPE}}


|-
|-
|Primary Battery
|<span id="Primary Battery">Primary Battery</span>
|
|
A primary battery is one which cannot be recharged but has to be thrown away (or recycled) once the chemicals it contains are exhausted.
{{Glossary:Primary Battery}}


|-
|-
|<span id="PSU">PSU</span>
|<span id="PSU">PSU</span>
|
|
See [[#Power Supply|Power Supply]].
{{Glossary:Power Supply}}


|-
|-
|PUP
|<span id="PUP">PUP</span>
|
|
A PUP or Potentially Unwanted Program is any useless but generally (though not necessarily) harmless program, often installed by the computer vendor or (knowingly or unknowingly) installed along with downloaded software. The main purpose of it is usually to sell you some other software which you probably don't want.
{{Glossary:PUP}}


|-
|-
|PV Cell
|<span id="PV Cell">PV Cell</span>
|
|
A PV or Photo Voltaic Cell is a device for converting light into electricity, commonly known as a solar cell.
{{Glossary:PV Cell}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Pwn">Pwn</span>
|<span id="Pwn">Pwn</span>
|
|
In hacker parlance, to pwn is to comprehensively "[[#Own|own]]" a device or computer. The term derives from a mis-typing of "own" in a video game in the 1990's.
{{Glossary:Pwn}}


|-
|-
Line 1,154: Line 1,194:


|-
|-
|Qubit
|<span id="Qubit">Qubit</span>
|
|
A qubit is a quantum [[#Bit|bit]] which can be in two different states simultaneously. We have never seen one of these at a Restart Party, and if we ever do we will probably be undecided about what to do with it.
{{Glossary:Qubit}}


|-
|-
Line 1,162: Line 1,202:


|-
|-
|RAM
|<span id="RAM">RAM</span>
|
|
RAM or Random Access Memory is the very fast memory used by a computer as working store for the programs and data currently being processed.
{{Glossary:RAM}}


|-
|-
|Ransomware
|<span id="Ransomware">Ransomware</span>
|
|
Ransomware is a particularly nasty form of [[#Malware|Malware]] which encrypts all your files then demands a ransom in order to recover them for you. But there is no guarantee that you'll get you're data back even if you pay the ransom.
{{Glossary:Ransomware}}


|-
|-
|RAT
|<span id="RAT">RAT</span>
|
|
A RAT or Remote Access [[#Trojan|Trojan]] is a type of [[#Malware|Malware]] which allows a remote attacker to see your screen, to move and click your mouse and to enter keystrokes on your keyboard, just as if he were sitting in your chair.
{{Glossary:RAT}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Rectifier">Rectifier</span>
|<span id="Rectifier">Rectifier</span>
|
|
A rectifier consists of a [[#Diode|diode]] or 4 diodes connected together to convert [[#AC|AC]] to [[#DC|DC]].
{{Glossary:Rectifier}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Reed switch">Reed switch</span>
|<span id="Reed switch">Reed switch</span>
|
|
A reed switch is a sealed glass tube containing two magnetic contacts forming a switch. The switch can be closed by bringing a magnet near or by energising an [[#Electromagnet|electromagnet]]. It can be used as the switch in a reed [[#Relay|relay]] or with a magnet attached to a moving part, for example to detect when a cover is closed, a printer paper drawer is fully inserted, or a float in a tank is indicating that the tank is full.
{{Glossary:Reed switch}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Relay">Relay</span>
|<span id="Relay">Relay</span>
|
|
A relay is a device consisting of a switch or a bank of switches operated by an [[#Electromagnet|electromagnet]]. The switch(es) may be simple switch contacts or a [[#Reed switch|reed switch]].
{{Glossary:Relay}}


|-
|-
|Reservoir Capacitor
|<span id="Reservoir Capacitor">Reservoir Capacitor</span>
|
|
A reservoir capacitor is a large value [[#Capacitor|capacitor]] used for [[#Smoothing|smoothing]] rectified AC. See [[Power supplies|power supplies]] in the wiki.
{{Glossary:Reservoir Capacitor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Resistance">Resistance</span>
|<span id="Resistance">Resistance</span>
|
|
Resistance is the property of resisting the flow of an electric current, much like how mechanical friction resists motion. It is measured in [[#Ohm|Ohms]].
{{Glossary:Resistance}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Resistor">Resistor</span>
|<span id="Resistor">Resistor</span>
|
|
A resistor is an electronic component generally containing a thin metal or oxide film or a thin wire through which electricity flows with difficulty. It's [[#Resistance|resistance]] is measured in [[#Ohm|Ohms]]. A resistor always generates heat, even if only a tiny amount, and any replacement must be rated in [[#Watt|Watts]] accordingly. See [[Basic electronic components#Resistors|Resistors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Resistor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="RF">RF</span>
|<span id="RF">RF</span>
|
|
RF or Radio Frequency is a high [[#Frequency|frequency]] capable of being transmitted as a radio signal.
{{Glossary:RF}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Ripple">Ripple</span>
|<span id="Ripple">Ripple</span>
|
|
Ripple is the name given to the residual variation after [[#Smoothing|smoothing]] in the output [[#Volt|voltage]] of a [[#DC|DC]] power supply. It occurs at the frequency or twice the frequency of the [[#AC|AC]] mains input.
{{Glossary:Ripple}}


|-
|-
|RJ11
|<span id="RJ11">RJ11</span>
|
|
RJ11 is a type of connector commonly used with telephones. It has up to 4 connections and a kind of barb which prevents it from being accidentally pulled out of a matching socket.
{{Glossary:RJ11}}


|-
|-
|RJ45
|<span id="RJ45">RJ45</span>
|
|
RJ45 is a type of connector commonly used on network cables. It has 8 connections and a kind of barb which prevents it from being accidentally pulled out of a matching socket.
{{Glossary:RJ45}}


|-
|-
|RMS
|<span id="RMS">RMS</span>
|
|
Since [[#AC|AC]] is continually varying it can't be measured as a unique voltage. The RMS or Root Mean Square value (a mathematical construct) is the [[#DC|DC]] voltage that would deliver the same power into a given load.
{{Glossary:RMS}}


|-
|-
|ROM
|<span id="ROM">ROM</span>
|
|
ROM or Read-only memory is memory which can be read as often as you like but cannot easily be changed. It is typically used for the [[#Firmware|firmware]] of a device.
{{Glossary:ROM}}


|-
|-
|Rootkit
|<span id="Rootkit">Rootkit</span>
|
|
A rootkit is an especially pernicious type of malware which masks its presence and hinders its removal by subverting the [[#Operating System|operating system]] in such a way as to expunge all references to itself and associated malware in listings of files and running programs.
{{Glossary:Rootkit}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Router">Router</span>
|<span id="Router">Router</span>
|
|
A router is a network device connecting two or more networks. It forwards packets of data received from one network to its destination or to another router closer to its destination on another network.
{{Glossary:Router}}


|-
|-
Line 1,250: Line 1,290:


|-
|-
|Sandbox
|<span id="Sandbox">Sandbox</span>
|
|
A sandbox is a kind of software "padded cell" in which untested or untrusted software can be tried out without risk to the host computer, a bit like a sandbox in which a child can play safely with the sand.
{{Glossary:Sandbox}}


|-
|-
|Schematic
|<span id="Schematic">Schematic</span>
|
|
A schematic is another name for a [[#Circuit Diagram|Circuit Diagram]].
{{Glossary:Schematic}}


|-
|-
|SCR
|<span id="SCR">SCR</span>
|
|
See [[#Thyristor|Thyristor]].
{{Glossary:Thyristor}}


|-
|-
|Secondary Battery
|<span id="Secondary Battery">Secondary Battery</span>
|
|
A secondary battery is one which can be recharged, restoring the chemicals it contains to their original state (or nearly).
{{Glossary:Secondary Battery}}


|-
|-
|Sector
|<span id="Sector">Sector</span>
|
|
A sector is the smallest block of data a disk can read or write. On older disks this was normally 512 [[#Byte|bytes]] but in modern disks and SSDs it is usually 4096 bytes.
{{Glossary:Sector}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Semiconductor">Semiconductor</span>
|<span id="Semiconductor">Semiconductor</span>
|
|
A semiconductor is a material such as silicon, germanium or gallium arsenide which can be made to conduct electricity either by negatively charged [[#Electron|electrons]] (N-type) or by positively charged [[#Hole|holes]] (P-type), by adding small amounts of carefully chosen impurities.
{{Glossary:Semiconductor}}


|-
|-
|SES
|<span id="SES">SES</span>
|
|
SES or Small Edison Screw is a smaller version of the [[#ES|ES]] screw-fitting lamp base. See [[Table_lamps#Types_of_bulb|Types of bulb]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:SES}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Seebeck">Seebeck</span>
|<span id="Seebeck">Seebeck</span>
|
|
The Seebeck effect is a thermo-electric effect by which a voltage is generated by a junction between two different conductors or semiconductors if it is heated or cooled relative to the rest of the circuit. The converse of the [[#Peltier|Peltier]] effect. Used by space craft venturing to the outer reaches of the solar system to generate electricity from a radioactive heat source such as a lump of plutonium.
{{Glossary:Seebeck}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Shell">Shell</span>
|<span id="Shell">Shell</span>
|
|
A shell is a program which offers a user interface to lower level parts of an [[#Operating System|operating system]] (referred to as the [[#Kernel|kernel]]), which themselves lack a user interface. The Mac or Linux command prompt is referred to as the shell, and the Windows Desktop is Windows' shell.
{{Glossary:Shell}}


|-
|-
|Short circuit
|<span id="Short circuit">Short circuit</span>
|
|
If two wires are touching which shouldn't the current may be able to take a short cut, meeting very little resistance and so allowing too much to flow. This is a Bad Thing and can cause your gadget to get hot or even catch fire. A short circuit can also be caused by an inadvertent solder bridge between two tracks on a printed circuit board, and this may simply cause the device to malfunction.
{{Glossary:Short circuit}}


|-
|-
|Shottky diode
|<span id="Shottky diode">Shottky diode</span>
|
|
A Shottky diode is a type of [[#Diode|diode]] using a metal-[[#Semiconductor|semiconductor]] junction, mainly used in power supplies on account of its ability to operate efficiently at higher frequencies. See [[Power_supplies#Switching_Mode_Power_Supplies|switching mode power supplies]] in the wiki.
{{Glossary:Shottky diode}}


|-
|-
|SIL
|<span id="SIL">SIL</span>
|
|
SIL or Single In-Line is a type of packaging used for circuit sub-assemblies, [[#Resistor|resistor]] networks and some [[#IC|IC]]s, and having a single row of pins designed for [[#Through-hole|through-hole]] assembly.
{{Glossary:SIL}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Sine wave">Sine wave</span>
|<span id="Sine wave">Sine wave</span>
|
|
A sine wave is the mathematically simplest form of vibration or oscillation, which can be represented by a single frequency only with no harmonics or overtones. Exemplified by the motion of a pendulum swinging through a small angle, or the height of a point on a wheel above or below the axle as the wheel turns at constant speed.
{{Glossary:Sine wave}}


|-
|-
|S.M.A.R.T
|<span id="S.M.A.R.T">S.M.A.R.T</span>
|
|
S.M.A.R.T or Self-Monitoring, Analysis, and Reporting Technology is a technology built into all modern [[#Hard Disk|hard disks]] and [[#Solid State Disk|solid state disks]] by which the device can monitor things like its error rate and report back, hopefully giving early warning of impending failure.
{{Glossary:S.M.A.R.T}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Smoothing">Smoothing</span>
|<span id="Smoothing">Smoothing</span>
|
|
Smoothing is the process of turning raw rectified [[#AC|AC]] (which drops to zero twice in every cycle of the AC) into a reasonably constant [[#Volt|voltage]]. See [[Power_supplies#Why_is_a_power_supply_needed.3F|Why is a power supply needed?]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Smoothing}}
 
|-
|<span id="Snubber">Snubber</span>
|
{{Glossary:Snubber}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Software">Software</span>
|<span id="Software">Software</span>
|
|
Software is the step-by-step instructions which tell a computer what to do and how to do it.
{{Glossary:Software}}


|-
|-
|Solder
|<span id="Solder">Solder</span>
|
|
Solder is a relatively low melting point mixture of (most often) tin and copper or tin and lead, making it very convenient for making electrical connections. (Americans call it "sodder", and many [[#Electron|electrons]] have been harmed in discussions as to which is correct. But the Americans are on their own on this one.)
{{Glossary:Solder}}


|-
|-
|Solenoid
|<span id="Solenoid">Solenoid</span>
|
|
A solenoid is an [[#Inductor|inductor]] or [[#Electromagnet|electromagnet]] in cylindrical form.
{{Glossary:Solenoid}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Solid State Disk">Solid State Disk</span>
|<span id="Solid State Disk">Solid State Disk</span>
|
|
A Solid State Disk (or SSD) is a faster (though more expensive) alternative to a [[#Hard Disk|hard disk]] for a computer's long term storage. A strange term in a way as it's no more solid than a hard disk, but a major difference (and advantage) is that it has no moving parts.
{{Glossary:Solid State Disk}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Source Code">Source Code</span>
|<span id="Source Code">Source Code</span>
|
|
Source code is software in a human-readable form as created by a developer. Generally, this cannot be directly  understood or run by a computer, but has to be translated into [[#Object Code|object code]] by a special program called a compiler, or read, interpreted and executed line by line by a program known as an interpreter.
{{Glossary:Source Code}}


|-
|-
|Spam
|<span id="Spam">Spam</span>
|
|
Spam is any unwanted email. This may simply be an irritation such as unwanted advertising but often it will be a scam or contain malicious attachments or links.
{{Glossary:Spam}}


|-
|-
|Spear Phishing
|<span id="Spear Phishing">Spear Phishing</span>
|
|
Spear phishing is a type of [[#Phishing|phishing]] attack directed at a specific victim who has probably been researched in order to make the attack seem highly plausible.
{{Glossary:Spear Phishing}}


|-
|-
|Spudger
|<span id="Spudger">Spudger</span>
|
|
A spudger is a tool with a thin plastic or metal blade typically used (for example) for inserting into the crack between two halves of a plastic case in order to pry it open.
{{Glossary:Spudger}}


|-
|-
|Spyware
|<span id="Spyware">Spyware</span>
|
|
Spyware is a type of [[#Malware|malware]] which reports browsing history and other personal information back to its creator without your permission.
{{Glossary:Spyware}}


|-
|-
|SSD
|<span id="SSD">SSD</span>
|
|
See [[#Solid State Disk|Solid State Disk]].
{{Glossary:Solid State Disk}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Superhet">Superhet</span>
|<span id="Superhet">Superhet</span>
|
|
A superhet is a common design of radio receiver in which the incoming signal, whatever its [[#Frequency|frequency]], is converted into a fixed intermediate frequency to make it easier to tune and amplify. See [[How_radios_work#Superhet|Superhet]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Superhet}}


|-
|-
|Stepper Motor
|<span id="Stepper Motor">Stepper Motor</span>
|
|
A stepper motor is a type of motor which, instead of turning continuously, turns by a certain fraction of a revolution and stops every time it is given an electrical pulse. Used, for example, for stepping the paper through a printer as it is being printed. See [[Electric_motors#DC_and_Universal_.28AC.2FDC.29_Motors|DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Stepper Motor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Surface_Mount">Surface Mount</span>
|<span id="Surface_Mount">Surface_Mount</span>
|
|
Surface mount is a method of manufacture in which electronic components are soldered directly onto the surface of a printed circuit board, as opposed to the older [[#Through-hole|through-hole]] method.
{{Glossary:Surface_Mount}}


|-
|-
|<span id="SWG">SWG</span>
|<span id="SWG">SWG</span>
|
|
SWG or Standard Wire Gauge is a set of wire diameters where each gauge is approximately 10% thinner than the previous. For example 16 gauge is 1/16in in diameter and 50 gauge is a thousanth of an inch. Cross sectional area in square millimeters is becoming a more usual measure. See [[wikipedia:Standard wire gauge|Standard Wire Gauge]] in Wikipedia.
{{Glossary:SWG}}


|-
|-
|Switch-mode Regulator
|<span id="Switch-mode Regulator">Switch-mode Regulator</span>
|
|
A switch-mode regulator is a [[#Circuit|circuit]] which produces a constant well defined [[#Volt|voltage]] from a variable or poorly defined voltage input, by switching the power on and off very rapidly and [[#Smoothing|smoothing]] the result. See [[Power_supplies#Switching_Mode_Power_Supplies|Switching Mode Power Supplies]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Switch-mode Regulator}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Synchronous motor">Synchronous motor</span>
|<span id="Synchronous motor">Synchronous motor</span>
|
|
A synchronous motor is a type of electric motor which only runs on [[#AC|AC]], and which runs at a speed which is locked to the AC supply [[#Frequency|frequency]]. See [[Electric_motors#Synchronous_Motors|Synchronous Motors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Synchronous motor}}


|-
|-
Line 1,410: Line 1,455:
|<span id="TB">TB</span>
|<span id="TB">TB</span>
|
|
A TB or Terabyte is 1000 [[#GB|gigabytes]], but often used for 1024 [[#GB|gigabytes]], which is more properly written TiB.
{{Glossary:TB}}


|-
|-
|THD
|<span id="THD">THD</span>
|
|
THD or Total Harmonic Distortion is a measure of the degree to which an audio system distorts its input, effectively introducing new frequencies into the output.
{{Glossary:THD}}


|-
|-
|Thermal Paste
|<span id="Thermal Paste">Thermal Paste</span>
|
|
Thermal paste is a paste with a special formulation making it a good conductor of heat, used to improve the transfer of heat from an electronic component to a [[#Heat Sink|heat sink]].
{{Glossary:Thermal Paste}}


|-
|-
|Thermionic Valve
|<span id="Thermionic Valve">Thermionic Valve</span>
|
|
See [[#Valve|Valve]].
{{Glossary:Valve}}


|-
|-
|Thermistor
|<span id="Thermistor">Thermistor</span>
|
|
A thermistor is an electronic component like a [[#Resistor|resistor]] but with a resistance which decreases substantially with increasing temperature. Often used for measuring or monitoring temperature, for example to warn of a dangerous temperature rise in a lithium battery.
{{Glossary:Thermistor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Through-hole">Through-hole</span>
|<span id="Through-hole">Through-hole</span>
|
|
Through-hole is a method of manufacture in which electronic components are attached to a circuit board by passing their leads or pins through holes in the board and soldering them to the board on the other side, as opposed to the more modern [[#Surface_Mount|surface mount]] technique which allows much higher component densities.
{{Glossary:Through-hole}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Thyristor">Thyristor</span>
|<span id="Thyristor">Thyristor</span>
|
|
A thyristor, SCR or Silicon Controlled Rectifier is an electronic component with 3 leads used as a switch. See [[Active_components#Transistors|Transistors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Thyristor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="TiB">TiB</span>
|<span id="TiB">TiB</span>
|
|
A TiB or terrabyte is 1,024[[#GiB|GiB]], or 1,099,511,627,776 [[#Byte|bytes]]. It is as much as can be addressed with 40 [[#Bit|bits]].
{{Glossary:TiB}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Torque">Torque</span>
|<span id="Torque">Torque</span>
|
|
Torque is a twisting force, such as applied by a screwdriver to a screw, a spanner to a nut, or produced by the spindle of an electric motor. It is measured in Newton Metres (Nm), being the twisting force created by a linear force of 1 Newton (102 grams weight on the earth) applied to a lever of length 1m, or twice the force applied to a lever of half the length etc.
{{Glossary:Torque}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Transducer">Transducer</span>
|<span id="Transducer">Transducer</span>
|
|
A transducer is any device which transforms energy or a measurement from one form to another, e.g. sound to/from electricity (speakers and microphones), or temperature, light, force etc. to an electrical signal.
{{Glossary:Transducer}}


|-
|-
|Transformer
|<span id="Transformer">Transformer</span>
|
|
A transformer consists of two (or more) coils of wire wound around a magnetic core, used to step a voltage up or down or provide isolation between two circuits. See [[Basic electronic components#Transformers|Transformers]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Transformer}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Transistor">Transistor</span>
|<span id="Transistor">Transistor</span>
|
|
A transistor is an electronic component with 3 leads used to amplify a signal or switch a current on or off. See [[Active_components#Transistors|Transistors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Transistor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Triac">Triac</span>
|<span id="Triac">Triac</span>
|
|
A triac is a type of [[#Thyristor|thyristor]] which, unlike the standard type, can be used on [[#AC|AC]]. Commonly used in dimmer switches.
{{Glossary:Triac}}


|-
|-
|TRIM
|<span id="TRIM">TRIM</span>
|
|
TRIM is a means by which an [[#Operating System|operating system]] can tell an [[#Solid State Disk|SSD]] about files that have been deleted. This is important for performance reasons related to the way an SSD works. See [[SSD Migration and Troubleshooting]] in the wiki.
{{Glossary:TRIM}}


|-
|-
|Triode
|<span id="Triode">Triode</span>
|
|
A triode is a device with three [[#Electrode|electrodes]]. Most commonly used to denote a type of [[#Valve|valve]].
{{Glossary:Triode}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Trojan">Trojan</span>
|<span id="Trojan">Trojan</span>
|
|
A trojan is a type of [[#Malware|malware]] which hides inside legitimate [[#Software|software]]. Named after the [[Wikipedia:Trojan_Horse|Trojan horse]] used by the ancient Greeks to insinuate select warriors into the city of Troy and so defeat it.
{{Glossary:Trojan}}


|-
|-
|Torx
|<span id="Torx">Torx</span>
|
|
Torx is a type of security screw or screwdriver with a 6-pointed star shape.
{{Glossary:Torx}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Two Factor Authentication">Two Factor Authentication</span>
|<span id="Two Factor Authentication">Two Factor Authentication</span>
|
|
Two Factor Authentication or 2FA is a login scheme where you are required to supply not only a password ("something you know") but also prove your possession of a token of some sort ("something you have") or provide a biometric such as a fingerprint ("something you are"). This makes it very much harder to compromise.
{{Glossary:Two Factor Authentication}}


|-
|-
|Tuned Circuit
|<span id="Tuned Circuit">Tuned Circuit</span>
|
|
A tuned circuit comprises a [[#Capacitor|capacitor]] and an [[#Inductor|inductor]] connected together. They resonate at a particular [[#Frequency|frequency]] as energy is continually and repeatedly passed from one to the other and back again.
{{Glossary:Tuned Circuit}}


|-
|-
|Two Step Authentication
|<span id="Two Step Authentication">Two Step Authentication</span>
|
|
Two-step authentication is a kind of "poor man's [[#Two Factor Authentication|Two factor Authentication]]" where the second factor is a one time code delivered to you by text message. Whilst considerably better than a password on its own, this is no longer greatly recommended on account of the relative ease by which a determined criminal could get a SIM card registered to your phone number and so get hold of the one time code. These "SIM swap" scams are endemic in some countries.
{{Glossary:Two Step Authentication}}


|-
|-
Line 1,513: Line 1,558:
|<span id="UEFI">UEFI</span>
|<span id="UEFI">UEFI</span>
|
|
UEFI or Unified Extensible Firmware Interface is a program built in to newer PCs (since around 2011) which controls the PC prior to booting and initiates the boot process. (Older computers used [[#BIOS|BIOS]]). See [[UEFI_and_GPT#BIOS_vs_UEFI|BIOS vs UEFI]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:UEFI}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Universal Motor">Universal motor</span>
|<span id="Universal Motor">Universal Motor</span>
|
|
An AC/DC or Universal motor is a type of electric motor that runs equally well on [[#AC|AC]] or [[#DC|DC]]. See [[Electric_motors#DC_and_Universal_.28AC.2FDC.29_Motors|DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Universal Motor}}


|-
|-
Line 1,524: Line 1,569:


|-
|-
|Vacuum Tube
|<span id="Vacuum Tube">Vacuum Tube</span>
|
|
See [[#Valve|Valve]].
{{Glossary:Valve}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Valve">Valve</span>
|<span id="Valve">Valve</span>
|
|
A thermionic valve or vacuum tube is an amplifying device consisting of a glass tube containing several electrodes in a vacuum. An electrically heated [[#Cathode|cathode]] emits [[#Electron|electrons]] which are attracted by an [[#Anode|anode]]. Their flow is controlled by the [[#Volt|voltage]] on a wire mesh [[#Grid|grid]] in their path. Long since superseded by much smaller and less power-hungry [[#Transistor|transistors]] in all but a few niche applications.
{{Glossary:Valve}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Varistor">Varistor</span>
|<span id="Varistor">Varistor</span>
|
|
A Voltage Dependent Resistor or varistor is a device which has a very high [[#Resistance|resistance]] until a certain [[#Volt|voltage]] is reached, whereupon its resistance falls sharply. Used for absorbing transient voltage surges in a mains supply.
{{Glossary:Varistor}}


|-
|-
|<span id="VDR">VDR</span>
|<span id="VDR">VDR</span>
|
|
See [[#Varistor|Varistor]].
{{Glossary:Varistor}}


|-
|-
|Virus
|<span id="Virus">Virus</span>
|
|
A virus is a term commonly used for any type of [[#Malware|malware]], but strictly meaning malware which self-replicates like a biological virus.
{{Glossary:Virus}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Volt">Volt (V)</span>
|<span id="Volt">Volt</span>
|
|
The Volt is the unit of electrical pressure, a bit like water pressure. Named after Italian physicist and chemist [[Wikipedia:Alessandro_Volta|Alessandro Volta]] who is credited with the invention of the battery. See [[Electric circuits, volts amps watts and ohms]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Volt}}


|-
|-
|Vulnerability
|<span id="Vulnerability">Vulnerability</span>
|
|
A vulnerability is a flaw in a website or software product by which it can be compromised for malicious purposes, whatever they might be.
{{Glossary:Vulnerability}}


|-
|-
Line 1,564: Line 1,609:
|<span id="WAN">WAN</span>
|<span id="WAN">WAN</span>
|
|
A WAN or Wide Area Network is a computer network spanning a substantial geographical area.
{{Glossary:WAN}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Watt">Watts (W)</span>
|<span id="Watt">Watt</span>
|
|
The Watt is the unit of power, calculated by multiplying the Volts by the Amps. Named after Scottish inventor, mechanical engineer and chemist [[Wikipedia:James_Watt|James Watt]], who invented the first truly practical steam engine. See [[Electric circuits, volts amps watts and ohms]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Watt}}


|-
|-
|Wavelength
|<span id="Wavelength">Wavelength</span>
|
|
Wavelength is the distance between successive crests of a radio wave as it travels through the air. See [[How_radios_work#Frequency_vs_wavelength|Freqvency vs wavelength]] in the Wiki.
{{Glossary:Wavelength}}


|-
|-
|WiFi
|<span id="WiFi">WiFi</span>
|
|
WiFi is a family of wireless [[#LAN|local area networking]] protocols, allowing a number of computers and other devices within a reasonably confined space to talk to each other.
{{Glossary:WiFi}}


|-
|-
|Worm
|<span id="Worm">Worm</span>
|
|
A worm is a type of [[#Malware|malware]] able to spread from one computer to another across a network, or across the whole Internet.
{{Glossary:Worm}}


|-
|-
Line 1,590: Line 1,635:


|-
|-
|XP
|<span id="XP">XP</span>
|
|
Windows XP is an obsolete Windows [[#Operating System|operating system]] first released in 2001. Extended support ended in 2014 and remaining users are strongly advised to migrate to a supported operating system as security patches are no longer provided.
{{Glossary:XP}}


|-
|-
|<span id="x86">x86</span>
|<span id="x86">x86</span>
|
|
x86 is the Intel [[#CPU|CPU]] architecture derived originally from the 8086 chip, released in 1978. Subsequent generations of chip were the 80286 (often referred to simply as 286), 386, 486 and 586 also known as Pentium. From 386 on, these were all 32 bit architectures.
{{Glossary:x86}}


|-
|-
Line 1,603: Line 1,648:


|-
|-
|Yagi
|<span id="Yagi">Yagi</span>
|
|
Yagi is a type of aerial commonly used for terrestrial television reception, and consisting of an array of parallel rods, the array pointing in the direction of the transmitter.
{{Glossary:Yagi}}


|-
|-
Line 1,611: Line 1,656:


|-
|-
|Zener diode
|<span id="Zener diode">Zener diode</span>
|
|
A zener diode is a type of [[#Diode|diode]] which starts conducting in the reverse (normally non-conducting) direction at a well defined voltage, often used in electronic circuits to define a threshold or specific voltage.
{{Glossary:Zener diode}}


|-
|-
|<span id="Zero Day">Zero Day</span>  
|<span id="Zero Day">Zero Day</span>
|
|
A zero-day is a vulnerability that is discovered (and very often exploited) before any fix is available, giving potential victims no time at all (zero days) in which to protect themselves. Also known as an 0-Day (pronounced "oh-day").
{{Glossary:Zero Day}}


|}
|}


[[Category:General]]
[[Category:General]]

Revision as of 22:53, 25 March 2019

There are many technical terms you might come across as you learn about repair, how things work, and electrical and electronic fundamentals, but don't let that put you off. Here you will find simple definitions of most of them.

Summary

The Restart Wiki tries to assume no previous knowledge, only a willingness to learn, and so we try to introduce and explain technical terms as we go along. But you might dip in and out or read the end of an article before the beginning, or you might consult other sources containing unfamiliar terms.

So this page gathers together as many technical terms as possible that you might come across in your fixing-related research, cross-referenced and linked in to main wiki articles where relevant.

You will find your favourite search engine or Wikipedia also to be valuable resources for looking up unfamiliar terms - those will often give you more detail.


Glossary of Terms

0-9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Term Meaning
0 - 9
0-Day

A zero-day is a vulnerability that is found and already being exploited by malicious actors before any fix is available, giving potential victims no time at all (zero days) in which to protect themselves. Also known as an 0-Day (pronounced "oh-day").

2FA

Two Factor Authentication or 2FA is a login scheme where you are required to supply not only a password ("something you know") but also prove your possession of a token of some sort ("something you have") or provide a biometric such as a fingerprint ("something you are"). This makes it very much harder to compromise.

A
AC

AC or Alternating Current is an electrical supply which reverses direction many times per second. See AC and DC in the Wiki.

AC/DC motor

An AC/DC or Universal motor is a type of electric motor that runs equally well on AC or DC. See DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors in the Wiki.

Adware

Adware is a type of malware which presents you with unwanted advertising that you never knowingly agreed to receive.

AF

AF or Audio Frequency is a frequency within the audible range of approximately 20Hz - 20kHz.

Aftermarket

Aftermarket refers to spare parts, consumables or accessories for an item not manufactured and sold by the item's manufacturer, but by a third party.

AM

AM or Amplitude Modulation is a method of modulation in which the amplitude of an RF signal is modulated by the AF signal to be transmitted. See Amplitude Modulation in the Wiki.

AMD64

AMD64 is a 64 bit CPU architecture created by AMD as an evolutionary development of the Intel x86 32 bit architecture.

Amp

The Amp is the unit of electric current, i.e. the quantity of electricity passing, a bit like the amount of water flowing in a river. Named after French mathematician and physicist André-Marie Ampère, remembered for his early work on electromagnetism. See Electric circuits, volts amps watts and ohms in the Wiki.

Analogue

Analogue is a method of representing a signal by a voltage (or a current) which is directly proportional to the value of the signal at any instant. For example, the output of a microphone is a voltage which continuously varies in direct proportion to the pressure of the incident sound wave.

Anode

An Anode is a positive electrode.

B
B7G

B7G was a 7-pin base used on miniature all-glass valves.

B9A

B9A was a 9-pin base used on miniature all-glass valves.

BC

BC or Bayonet Cap is a type of lamp base fitted with a push-and-twist action. There are several sizes but the 22mm diameter size is much the commonest. See Types of bulb in the Wiki.

Bimetallic Strip

A bimetallic strip consists of two strips of different metals fixed together. When heated up, one strip expands more than the other, causing the combined strip to bend away from the one which is expanding more. Often made into a snap action to create a switch which snaps open at a given temperature.

Binary

Binary is a number system using only the digits 0 and 1, well suited to computers as they can represent those digits by the on and off states of a switch.

BIOS

The BIOS or Basic Input/Output System was a program built in to PCs up until around 2011, which controled the PC prior to booting and initiated the boot process. (Newer computers use UEFI). See BIOS vs UEFI in the Wiki.

Bipolar Transistor

A bipolar or junction transistor is a type of transistor with 3 semiconductor layers. See Transistors in the Wiki.

Bit

A bit or binary digit is the smallest unit of data, representing one of two values or states such as 1/0, or yes/no, or love Marmite/hate Marmite.

BJT

A bipolar or junction transistor is a type of transistor with 3 semiconductor layers. See Transistors in the Wiki.

Bluetooth

Bluetooth is a personal area networking protocol allowing an individual's personal devices to communicate with one another.

Boost regulator

A boost regulator is a type of switch-mode voltage regulator which produces a higher output voltage than the input.

Bootstrap

A bootstrap is a multi-stage process, for example for starting a computer, in which each stage (starting with a very simple one) enables the next more sophisticated stage to happen, like pulling yourself up by your bootstraps. A bootloader is a program which uses the bootstrap principle to "boot up" a computer into its running state.

Bot

A bot (short for Robot) is a computer which has been compromised in order to autonomously use its Internet connection for spreading spam or malware. Usually it will be one of many such computers comprising a "botnet", under the control of a "bot herder".

Brick

To "brick" a device is to render it completely useless, i.e. having as much functionality as a house brick. This can happen, for example, if the wrong type of firmware is accidentally loaded. "Unbricking" it can then be challenging if not virtually impossible.

Bridge Rectifier

A bridge rectifier consists of four diodes connected in a diamond shape. Applying AC to two opposite corners, you get DC out of the other two. See Linear Power Supplies in the Wiki.

Brush

A brush in an AC/DC motor consists of a small block of graphite, a pair of which feed the current to the rotor via the commutator. See DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors in the Wiki.

Brushless Motor

An Electronically Commutated or Brushless motor is a type of DC motor which uses an electronic circuit to switch the current between several coils in order to keep the rotor turning, instead of using a commutator and brushes to perform this function. See DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors in the Wiki.

Buck regulator

A buck regulator is a type of switch-mode voltage regulator which produces a lower output voltage than the input.

Byte

A byte or octet is 8 bits, which can be used to represent a single letter, number or punctuation mark, or a number between 0 and 255, or anything else that can have up to 256 values.

C
Carrier

A carrier is a radio frequency signal which is modulated by an audio signal (for example) so that the audio can be transmitted by radio.

Capacitor

A capacitor is an electronic component which can store electric charge. Its capacitance (or its capacity for storing charge) is measured in Farads. An old-fashioned name for it is a condenser. See Capacitors in the Wiki.

Capacitance

Capacitance is the property of storing electric charge measured in Farads, which is the purpose of a capacitor.

Cathode

A cathode is a negative electrode.

CFL

Glossary:Compact Florescent Lamp

Circuit

Electricity really hates piling up, so it will only flow if it can go all around a complete circuit and come back to where it started. (The usual symbol for an on/off switch is a circle broken by a dash, representing an interrupted circuit.)

Circuit Diagram

A vacuum cleaner, for example, may contain several paths or "circuits" around which the current can flow, and a computer may contain a huge number. A circuit diagram is a picture of all those paths (or some of them) allowing you to see how the parts are connected together and hopefully understand how it works.

CLI

A CLI or Command Line Interface is a type of user interface in which the user types commands at a prompt. Also known as a Character User Interface or CUI (pronounced "coo-ee"). The acronym is also used in telephony to mean Calling Line Identity, i.e. the phone number initiating a call.

Cloud

On their network diagrams, computer network engineers frequently represent the Internet or unspecified remote computers by a fluffy cloud. The "cloud" has therefore come to be used to refer to any remote third party computer services or networks. Bear in mind though that the cloud is in reality just someone else's computer. It's worth asking yourself, therefore, how much you trust them with your data!

COB

COB or Chip On Board is a method of construction in which one or more bare semiconductor chips are mounted directly on a circuit board rather than encapsulated in individual packages. It is often used in mass produced items such as calculators in which the chip is covered by a blob of black resin, and more recently to mount many LED chips on a base to form a high power lamp, or on a thin strip to make a filament type of LED lamp.

Commutator

The commutator is the part of the rotor of an AC/DC motor which receives the current from the brushes. See DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors in the Wiki.

Compact Florescent Lamp

Glossary:Compact Florescent Lamp

Conductor

A conductor is a material which conducts electricity. Metals and carbon are conductors.

Continuity

Continuity refers to an intentional low resistance electrical path between two points in a circuit. A continuity tester is a device which tests for continuity, often giving an audible beep when continuity is detected.

CPU

The CPU or Central Processing Unit is the "brains" of a computer which executes a computer program.

Crapware

Crapware is a somewhat vulgar term (best not used in polite company) referring to the largely useless junk software often bundled by a manufacturer with a Windows computer or an Android tablet or phone. (In some circles you might prefer to use the more genteel term bloatware.)

Crimp

A crimp is a type of connection where a wire is inserted into a tubular receptacle which is then crushed onto the wire with a special purpose crimping tool. Correctly formed, a crimped connection is generally stronger than a soldered one, and can be done faster and more reliably in a production environment.

CRT

A CRT or Cathode Ray Tube is the image-producing device in old fashioned televisions, computer monitors, radar sets and oscilloscopes. It consists of an evacuated glass enclosure in which electrons are fired at a fluorescent screen to create the image. Superseded by much less bulky LCD displays.

CUI

A Character User Interface or CUI is a user interface operated exclusively with a keyboard by typing commands at a prompt or selecting options from a menu. This is in contrast to a Graphical User Interface. Also known as a Command Line Interface or CLI.

Custom ROM

A custom ROM is an alternative to the operating system provided by the vendor for a device such as a smartphone.

D
DAB

DAB or Digital Audio Broadcasting is the standard used for digital broadcast radio.

DC

DC or Direct Current is an electrical supply which goes in one direction only. See AC and DC in the Wiki.


DDOS

A DDOS or Distributed Denial of Service attack is one launched simultaneously from many different computers across the Internet, so increasing its power and making it harder to defend against.

Decimal

Decimal is the number system we commonly use in everyday life, based on the digits 0 - 9.

Desktop Manager

The Desktop Manager is that part of an operating system which represents the computer's applications and tools on the screen as items on a desk.

Diac

A DIAC is a 2-terminal electronic component which switches from a non-conducting to a conducting state when a certain voltage is applied, then remains conducting until the current is switched off. Commonly used in conjunction with a triac in dimmer switches.

Dielectric

A dielectric is an insulating material in which the positive and negative charges in the atoms or molecules can be displaced slightly in opposite directions from their natural positions by an electric field, causing the material as a whole to exhibit an electrical charge.

Digital

Digital is a method of representing, processing and transmitting a signal or a quantity as a number or sequence of numbers, usually expressed in binary as ones and zeros.

DIL

DIL or Dual In-Line is a type of IC packaging with 2 parallel rows of pins, designed for through-hole assembly.

Diode

A diode is a 2 terminal electronic component allowing a current to flow in one direction but not the other. See Diodes and Rectifiers in the Wiki.

Dipole

A dipole is a thing with two opposite ends, such as a magnet (with North and South poles), a molecule with a positive charge at one end and a negative charge at the other, or a type of aerial consisting of two rods placed end to end.

Distro

A distro is a flavour of Linux comprising a kernel, a desktop manager and a selection of utilities.

Demodulation

Demodulation is the process of recovering an audio or TV signal (for example) from the RF signal received from an aerial.

DLP

DLP or Digital Light Processing is a class of data projector using a Digital Micromirror Device to produce the image.

DMD

A DMD or Digital Micromirror Device is an imaging device containing a tiny electrically operated mirror to control the brightness of each pixel.

DMM

A DMM or Digital Multimeter is a Multimeter with digital readout.

DOA

DOA or Dead on Arrival refers to a brand new item which fails to work when first unboxed and switched on.

DOS

Glossary:DOS

E
Earth Loop

When two pieces of audio equipment are connected together, each having its own earth connection, some of the small current that should be going from one of the pieces of equipment to its own earth connection instead goes via the connection to the other equipment's earth, causing an objectionable hum in the audio output. This is known as a Ground or Earth Loop.

E-Ink

E-Ink is a type of display, usually monochrome only and commonly used in e-book readers. It has the advantage of using very little power, and can be viewed by reflected ambient light rather than needing an active backlight.

EHT

EHT or Extremely High Tension is the name given to the very high voltage supply (usually in excess of 1,000V) required by cathode ray tubes in old fashioned televisions, magnetrons in microwave ovens and a few related devices. Needless to say, it can be very dangerous!

Electricity

Electricity: tamed magic... well, mostly tamed.

Electrode

An electrode is an electrical conductor making contact with a non-metallic part of a device such as a semiconductor or the electrolyte in a battery or the vacuum in a valve.

Electrolyte

An electrolyte is a conducting liquid containing negative and positive ions, such as the liquid in a battery

Electrolytic Capacitor

An electrolytic capacitor is a type of capacitor which employs an electro-chemical process to achieve a high value of capacitance. However, their failure rate is relatively high - see Capacitors in the Wiki.

Electromagnet

An electromagnet is a coil of wire wound around an iron core. A current passing through the coil magnetises the iron for only as long as the current flows. Typically used in electro-mechanical devices such as toasters, where it holds the lever down while the toast is toasting.

Electromagnetic Wave

An electromagnetic or EM wave is a kind of wave in space in which energy is continually exchanged between electric and magnetic fields similarly to how energy in a ripple on a pond is continually exchanged between gravity and momentum. Radio waves, light, x-rays and gamma rays are all EM waves of different wavelengths.

Electron

An electron is a sub-atomic particle carrying a negative electrical charge. A flow of electrons constitutes an electric current.

Electronically Commutated Motor

An Electronically Commutated or Brushless motor is a type of DC motor which uses an electronic circuit to switch the current between several coils in order to keep the rotor turning, instead of using a commutator and brushes to perform this function. See DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors in the Wiki.

EMF

EMF or Electro-Motive Force is just a fancy name for Voltage, most often used in the context of a dynamo, or the dynamo effect in an electric motor.

Encryption

Encryption is the process of transforming a message or data (the "cleartext") into a completely unintelligible form (the "ciphertext"). Only with knowledge of a secret key can the ciphertext be transformed back into the cleartext.

Epoxy

Epoxy is a type of very strong adhesive which comes as a resin and a separate hardener. It starts to set only when the two are mixed together.

ES

ES or Edison Screw is a screw-fitting lamp base. Several sizes are in common use. See Types of bulb in the Wiki.

ESD

ESD or Electrostatic Discharge is static caused by friction such as shoes on a carpet, and particularly noticeable in conditions of low humidity. Even if not perceptible, it can damage sensitive electronic components.

Ethernet

Ethernet is a family of networking protocols defining several methods by which packets of data can be transmitted across a computer network.

F
Farad

The Farad is the unit of capacitance. Named after British scientist and experimenter Michael Faraday, who made important discoveries in the fields of electromagnetism and electrochemistry. See Capacitors in the Wiki.

Ferrite rod aerial

A ferrite rod aerial is a type of aerial used for medium and long wave radio reception and consisting of a rod or block of ferrite (a magnetic but insulating material) with one or more coils of wire wound around it. See How radios work in the wiki.

FET

A FET or field-effect transistor is a type of transistor where the current flowing between two of its terminals (the source and the drain) is controlled by an electric field created by a voltage on a third terminal (the gate). See Transistors in the Wiki.

FFC

An FFC or Flat Flexible Cable is a type of cable with parallel conducting tracks on a plastic ribbon. Used extensively for connections between separate modules in many types of device.

Filament Lamp

A filament lamp is a type of light bulb containing a thin wire which glows white hot when a current is passed through it. See Types of bulb in the Wiki.

Filing System

The filing system is that part of an operating system which manages a disk and presents it to the user as individual named files, hiding all the messy details about where on disk the data is actually stored.

Firewall

A firewall is a networking device which controls the traffic passing through it according to a defined policy, typically to prevent hackers from accessing a private network, or to block maliciously crafted requests.

Firmware

Firmware is the Software which is built in to the hardware of a computer or smart device and is expected to be rarely if ever changed.

Flash

Flash is a term used for a type of memory that can only be changed by erasing and rewriting a substantial block of cells at a time. Flashing is used as a verb for the process of rewriting or updating such a memory.

Flux

Flux is a liquid or paste which helps to remove oxide or other deposits in order to make good solder joints. Only usually needed for challenging soldering jobs such as surface mount as solder normally contains a core of flux.

FM

FM or Frequency Modulation is a method of modulation in which the frequency of an RF signal is modulated by the AF signal to be transmitted. See Frequency Modulation in the Wiki.

FPC

An FPC or Flexible Printed Circuit. A flexible substrate with printed circuit tracks, generally brown or dark orange, and often having surface mount components or connectors soldered directly onto it.

Frequency

Frequency is the number of complete (positive and negative) cycles of AC which occur per second. Measured in Hertz.

Full wave rectifier

A full wave rectifier is one that which uses both the positive and negative half cycles of the AC input to produce a DC output. Most often this is achieved with a bridge rectifier.

Fuse

A fuse is a thin piece of low melting point wire designed to melt and so break the circuit if too much current flows due to a fault.

G
Germanium

Germanium is a semiconductor used for the manufacture of early transistors. It has been superseded by silicon for nearly all purposes but is still used in solar cells and LEDs.

GB

A GB or Gigabyte is 1000 megabytes, but the term is often used for 1024 megabytes, more properly written GiB.

GHz

A GHz is a billion (thousand million) Hz

GiB

A GiB is 1,024MiB, or 1,073,741,825 bytes. It is as much as can be addressed with 30 bits.

GPT

GPT or GUID Partition Table is the name given to a newer method of organising the contents of a disk. See MBR vs GPT disk layout in the wiki.

Grid

The grid is the control electrode in a valve. Driving it negative with respect to the cathode restricts or prevents a flow of electrons from the cathode to the anode.

Ground Loop

When two pieces of audio equipment are connected together, each having its own earth connection, some of the small current that should be going from one of the pieces of equipment to its own earth connection instead goes via the connection to the other equipment's earth, causing an objectionable hum in the audio output. This is known as a Ground or Earth Loop.

GUI

A GUI (pronounced "goo-ey") or Graphical User Interface is a user interface operated principally using a graphical display and a mouse or other pointing device, as opposed to a Character User Interface, operated just by a keyboard and text on a display.

GUID

A GUID or Globally Unique Identifier is a 128 bit number used for identifying various types of resource in a computer system. A 128 bit number is so large that if you choose one at random, there is practically no chance that anyone else will ever pick the same one, even if you were to wait billions of years.

H
Half wave rectifier

A half wave rectifier is one which uses only the positive (or the negative) half cycles of the AC input to produce a DC output, by using a single diode.

Hall Effect

When a current flows through a conductor and a magnetic field is applied to the conductor at right angles, the current tends to be pushed to one side of the conductor, at right angles to the magnetic field. This is the Hall Effect. Used in a Hall effect device to detect or measure a magnetic field, for example in smartphones to detect the earth's magnetic field to implement a compass.

Halogen Lamp

A halogen lamp is an improved form of filament lamp with longer life and better efficiency, but still falling far short of compact fluorescent and LED lamps. See Types of bulb in the Wiki.

Hard Disk

A hard disk or HD is a common type of computer main long term storage in which data is held on a rapidly spinning magnetic disk. (Increasingly, modern computers use a Solid State Disk instead.)

Hardware

Hardware is the physical electronic and electromechanical parts which comprise a computer.

HD

A hard disk or HD is a common type of computer main long term storage in which data is held on a rapidly spinning magnetic disk. (Increasingly, modern computers use a Solid State Disk instead.)

Heat Sink

A heat sink is a piece of metal designed to conduct heat away from a component so as to prevent it getting too hot. When soldering, a pair of pliers can be applied to a lead of a sensitive electronic component as a heat sink to prevent the heat of the solder from damaging the component.

Henry

The Henry is the unit of inductance. Named after American scientist Joseph Henry, who made important discoveries in the field of electromagnetism (independantly of Michael Faraday). See Inductors in the Wiki.

Hertz

The Hertz (Hz) is the unit of frequency, numerically equal to cycles per second. Named after German physicist Heinrich Hertz, who was the first to prove the existence of previously theorised electromagnetic waves.

Hexadecimal

Hexadecimal is a number system based on 16 digits which are represented by 0-9 and A - F. This is useful because each hexadecimal digit can represent 4 bits, and 2 hexadecimal digits can represent 8 bits or a byte.

Hole

A hole is the lack of an electron in a crystal lattice where there should be one. This leaves behind a positive charge. An electron from an adjacent atom can move into the hole causing the hole to move to the next atom. In this way, holes can act like positively charged particles and carry an electric current.

HT

HT or High Tension is the name given to the main high voltage supply required by valve equipment, usually in the region of several hundred volts. Warning: this can be dangerous!

Hum

Hum is a constant low frequency sound in the output of audio equipment due (for example) to inadequate smoothing in the power supply and residual ripple in its output, or to the presence of a ground loop. Alternatively, it's what you do when you don't know the words.

Hz

The Hertz (Hz) is the unit of frequency, numerically equal to cycles per second. Named after German physicist Heinrich Hertz, who was the first to prove the existence of previously theorised electromagnetic waves.

I
IC

An Integrated Circuit or IC is a circuit comprising anything from dozens to billions of electronic components, all fabricated on a single silicon chip. See Integrated Circuits in the Wiki.

IF

IF or Intermediate Frequency is a frequency between the RF and AF in a superhet radio at which most of the amplification and selection of the required station occurs.

IGBT

An Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor or IGBT is a device in which a MOSFET and a bipolar transistor are integrated into a single structure offering many of the advantages of both types of device. IGBTs are therefore capable of operating at both very high voltages and very high currents.

Impedance

For most practical purposes, impedance is the same as resistance, and also measured in ohms. Resistance is the number of steady volts you need to push a steady amp through a circuit, but if the voltage is AC or is varying, then inductance and capacitance add a kind of momentum and springiness to the way the current responds to the voltage. The volts per amp is then likely to be different, and is termed impedance.

Inductance

Inductance is the property of a coil of wire (or even a straight piece of wire) of storing energy in the form of a magnetic field generated by a current flowing through it. It is measured in Henrys. When the voltage driving it is reduced or withdrawn, this energy is released back into the current, giving it a kind of momentum and tending to keep it flowing.

Induction motor

An induction motor is a type of electric motor which runs only on AC. Often used in fans. See Induction Motors in the Wiki.

Inductor

An inductor is a coil of wire, very often wound around a magnetic core, providing a kind of momentum to the flow of electricity. Its inductance is measured in Henrys. See Inductors in the Wiki.

Inrush

Inrush is a momentary surge of current drawn by a device on first switching it on, often causing a noticeable dimming of lights for a fraction of a second. Some equipment is fitted with a slow blow fuse to withstand the inrush. Items containing a large electric motor often have a significant inrush current as the motor starts.

Insulation displacement

Insulation displacement is a type of connection where insulated wire, without stripping the insulation, is forced into a slot with sharp inner edges. These edges cut through the insulation and bite into the wire. Commonly used on telephone and network connectors, and connectors designed for attachment to ribbon cables.

Insulator

An insulator is a material which doesn't conduct electricity. Examples are plastic, wood, glass and fresh air.

Integrated Circuit

An Integrated Circuit or IC is a circuit comprising anything from dozens to billions of electronic components, all fabricated on a single silicon chip. See Integrated Circuits in the Wiki.

International Octal

IO or International Octal was a type of 8-pin valve base with a keyed spigot, used on older and larger valves, and often referred to simply as "octal".

Internet

The Internet is a global computer network in which (unlike the telephone network) information is transmitted as relatively small packets of data, each packet individually addressed and individually routed to its destination. Many different services use this foundation, two of the best known being the World Wide Web (which delivers web pages) and email.

Internet of Things

The Internet of Things (or IoT) refers to the networking of smart devices which have not traditionally been thought of as computers, such as vehicles, security cameras, home heating systems, kitchen appliances and medical devices, as well as industrial machines and sensors. As a result, they can be remotely monitored and controlled or can feed data back to a service provider. However, if they are not properly secured (as is often the case) they can represent a serious security risk.

Intranet

An intranet is a computer network using the same technology as the Internet but existing only within the confines of a particular company or organisation. However, most intranets have a gateway through which users can access the wider Internet, usually subject to certain restrictions.

Ion

An ion is a positively or negatively charged atom.

IoT

The Internet of Things (or IoT) refers to the networking of smart devices which have not traditionally been thought of as computers, such as vehicles, security cameras, home heating systems, kitchen appliances and medical devices, as well as industrial machines and sensors. As a result, they can be remotely monitored and controlled or can feed data back to a service provider. However, if they are not properly secured (as is often the case) they can represent a serious security risk.

IP

IP or Internet Protocol is a set of standards defining how data (whether it be it web pages, emails or anything else), broken up into individually addressed packets, is moved across the Internet from a source to a destination. There are two versions in use: predominantly Version 4 (IPv4), and also version 6 (IPv6), which allows vastly more addresses.

ISO

ISO is the International Organisation for Standardisation which publishes thousands of standards, but in computing the term is often used to refer to one particular standard for the layout of information on a CD or DVD. A Linux or Windows installation file, for example, will often be available as an ISO file, which is a byte-for-byte disk image which can be burned directly to a DVD.

J
Jack

A jack is the type of plug (and its socket) familiar as a headphone plug.

jFET

A Junction Field Effect Transistor is a type of field effect transistor where the gate is formed by a semiconductor junction. See Transistors in the Wiki.

Joule

The joule is the unit of energy, being the amount of work done by 1 watt in 1 second. 4.2 Joules are equivalent to 1 calorie of heat. The unit is named after English physicist James Prescott Joule, best known for discovering the law which states how much heat is produced in a conductor by the passage of an electric current.

Junction Transistor

A bipolar or junction transistor is a type of transistor with 3 semiconductor layers. See Transistors in the Wiki.

K
kB

A Kilobyte (kB) is 1024 bytes.

Kernel

The core of an operating system, which concerns itself with managing the hardware resources at the lowest level. It normally has no user interface, this being provided by another program or programs referred to as the shell. Think of a nut. The shell is what you see but the goodness is inside in the kernel.

Keylogger

A keylogger is a type of malware or a hardware device which logs your keystrokes (including passwords, credit card numbers etc.) and sends them back to a malicious party, or stores them for later collection.

kHz

A kHz is 1,000 Hz

L
LAN

A Local Area Network is a computer network covering a limited area such as a single building, or at most, a campus.

LCD

A Liquid Crystal Display is the type of display used in most calculators, phones, tablets and computer monitors. It uses a special liquid which acts on polarised light under an electric field.

LDR

A Light Dependant Resistor is a device having a high resistance in the dark but whose resistance falls with increasing illumination.

LED

A LED is a Light Emitting Diode, similar to any other semiconductor diode but specially crafted so that photons are emitted as electrons fall into holes at the junction between a p-type and an n-type region.

Linear Regulator

A linear regulator is a circuit often in the form of an IC which produces a constant well defined voltage from a variable or poorly defined higher voltage input, simply by absorbing excess voltage and turning it into heat. See Linear Power Supplies in the Wiki.

Linux

Linux is a free, open source operating system kernel which, packaged into a distro, can be used as an alternative to Windows or OS/X.

Live Linux

A live linux is a Linux system on a bootable CD/DVD or memory stick which can be run from that media without affecting the installed operating system on the hard disk.

Li-ion

Lithium-ion and lithium-polymer are types of high capacity rechargeable battery much used in portable electronic devices and electric vehicles. See Batteries in the Wiki.

Li-polymer

Lithium-ion and lithium-polymer are types of high capacity rechargeable battery much used in portable electronic devices and electric vehicles. See Batteries in the Wiki.

Load cell

A load cell is a device for measuring a force and presenting it as an electrical signal. See Digital weighing scales in the wiki.

Loupe

A loupe is a magnifying glass, generally without a handle. Jewellers and watchmakers commonly use an eye loupe, which with a little practice can be held in the eye socket, leaving both hands free.

LT

LT or Low Tension is the name given to the low voltage supply required by valve equipment to heat the cathodes of the valves. A common value is 6.3V.

M
Magnetron

A magnetron is the device which produces the microwaves in a microwave oven, originally developed during WWII as a small and high powered source of microwaves for radar applications. A strong magnet causes a stream of electrons to circle around a series of cavities causing them to resonate electrically in much the same way as blowing across the top of a bottle can make it resonate.

Malware

Malware is a term used for any bad piece of software which attempts to get onto your computer for malicious purposes.

MB

A MB or megabyte is 1000 kilobytes, but the term is often used for 1024 kilobytes, which is more properly written MiB.

MBR

The MBR or Master Boot Record is the name given to an older method of organising the contents of a disk. See MBR vs GPT disk layout in the wiki.

Metal Halide Lamp

A metal halide lamp is a very efficient type of lamp which operates by creating an electrical discharge through a mixture of gasses such as mercury vapour and a metal iodide or bromide (the "halide") in order to give the full spectrum of white light. They are not used domestically except as the light source in a data projector as they can take several minutes to reach full brightness, run very hot, and can explode if abused. They are frequently used for commercial lighting (e.g. in shops) and for floodlighting.

MHz

A MHz is a million Hz

MiB

A MiB is 1,048,576 bytes, the amount that can be addressed with 20 bits.

Modem

A modem or "modulator/demodulator" is a device used to perform 2-way conversion of a data stream between digital and analogue forms, for example to communicate data over a voice or broadband (analogue) connection.

Modulation

Modulation is the process of impressing an audio or TV signal (for example) onto an RF signal for transmission. See How radios work in the wiki.

MOSFET

A MOSFET or Metal Oxide Field Effect Transistor is a type of field effect transistor where the gate is formed by metal deposited on an extremely thin insulating oxide layer. See Transistors in the Wiki.

MOV

An MOV or Metal Oxide Varistor is the commonest type of Varistor.

MTBF

MTBF or Mean Time Between Failures is a measure of the reliability of an item, most usually measured in hours (or thousands of hours).

Multimeter

A multimeter is an electrical test instrument which measures voltage, current, resistance and often several other things. Most usually they have a digital readout but analogue ones with a dial are also available. See How to use a multimeter in the Wiki.

N
N-type

N-type is the name given to a Semiconductor material doped with an impurity whose atoms have one too many electrons to match the crystal lattice. These "spare" electrons can carry an electric current as negative charges.

NiCd

NiCd or Nickel Cadmium is a type of rechargeable battery, similar in many ways to Nickel Metal Hydride but with higher maximum charge and discharge rates making it suitable for power tools and radio controlled models, and having greater tolerance to abuse, but suffering from a "memory effect" and containing toxic cadmium. See Batteries in the Wiki.

NiMH

NiMH or Nickel Metal Hydride is a type of rechargeable battery, similar in many ways to Nickel Cadmium but with greater capacity, reduced "memory effect" and containing no toxic cadmium, but having a higher self-discharge rate. See Batteries in the Wiki.

NPN

A type of junction transistor comprising a P-type layer sandwiched between two N-type layers.

NTC Resistor

A negative temperature coefficient or NTC resistor is a resistor whose resistance falls strongly with increasing temperature, unlike most resistors whose resistance increases slightly with temperature. Used as a temperature sensing component in electronic thermometers, to warn of overheating, particularly in lithium batteries, and as an inrush current limiter.

O
Object Code

Software in a form that can be directly executed by a computer, but is virtually unintelligible to humans, simply comprising binary numbers.

Octal

A number system based on only 8 digits 0 - 7. This is useful because each octal digit can represent 3 bits. See also International Octal (a type of valve base).

Octet

A byte or octet is 8 bits, which can be used to represent a single letter, number or punctuation mark, or a number between 0 and 255, or anything else that can have up to 256 values.

OEM

Original Equipment Manufacturer. A somewhat confusing term generally meaning a company which sells another company's manufactured goods under its own branding and with its own warranty. Also used of software, for a licence allowing a computer manufacturer to install the software on systems they build. (In fact, the manufacturer could be you, building a computer from standard parts.)

Ohm

A bit like friction, the Ohm is the unit of resistance to flow of electricity. Named after German mathematician and physicist Georg Simon Ohm, chiefly remembered for discovering Ohm's Law. See Electric circuits, volts amps watts and ohms in the Wiki.

Ohm's Law

The amount of current (Amps) flowing in a circuit is the pressure (Volts) divided by the resistance (Ohms), or I = V / R.

OLED

Organic Light Emitting Diode. A light emitting diode using an organic (i.e. carbon-based chemical) semiconductor rather than one based on inorganic materials such as silicon or a compound of gallium. Also used to refer to a display made up of many OLEDs.

Open Circuit

Electricity likes to go all the way round a circuit and back to where it started. When there is a break in the circuit preventing the current from flowing (maybe due to a fault) this is termed an open circuit.

Open Source

Software or hardware the source code or design of which is non-proprietary and made freely available for anyone to inspect or modify for their own purposes.

Operating System

The software which manages the computing, storage and communications resources of a computer, and presents a user interface allowing the user to run and interact with programs as desired.

Opto coupler

An LED and a phototransistor, electrically isolated but in a single packaged. Used for signalling between two circuits which must have no electrical connection between them.

Oscillator

A circuit which produces an AC output at a chosen frequency.

Oscilloscope

A device for producing a graphical representation of how an electrical signal varies with time.

Own

In hacker slang, to gain full control of a device or computer through subversive means. See also Pwn.

P
P-type

P-type is the name given to a Semiconductor material doped with an impurity whose atoms have one too few electrons to match the crystal lattice. These result in holes which can effectively move about and carry an electric current as positive charges. Think of bubbles in a liquid. These "holes" in the liquid effectively have a negative weight and so tend to rise against gravity.

PAN

A PAN is a Personal Area Network, i.e. a computer network linking a single person's devices, typically covering, at most, a single room.

Partition

A partition is a subdivision of a disk. Under the control of the operating system, a disk can be sliced up like a cake into several such partitions, each being dedicated to a particular purpose. Otherwise, you would have to install another physical disk for each purpose. Also, large computers are sometimes made to pretend to be several independent smaller ones, and these can also be referred to as partitions.

Password Manager

A password manager is a program or app which stores all your passwords in an encrypted vault under a (hopefully) strong master password. Many password managers will also generate and remember totally random unguessable passwords, and automatically apply them to login password prompts.

PAT Test

A PAT or Portable Appliance Test is a basic electrical safety test which should be applied to all mains operated electrical equipment before and after attempting a repair. It comprises a visual inspection and an automated test. See PAT testing in the Wiki.

PCB

A PCB or printed circuit board is a board on which conductive copper tracks are used to make the connections between the components, rather than individual wires.

PD

PD or Potential Difference is a difference of voltage between two points in a circuit.

Peltier

The Peltier effect is a thermo-electric effect by which a junction between two different conductors or semiconductors warms if a current is passed through it in one direction and cools if it is passed in the opposite direction. The converse of the Seebeck effect. Used for cooling in mini fridges.

Pentode

A pentode is a valve with 5 electrodes: an anode, a cathode and 3 grids: a control grid (as in a triode), a screen grid to reduce stray interaction between the control grid and the anode, and a suppressor grid which ensures that electrons hitting the anode stay there.

Phillips

Phillips is a type of cross-head screw or screwdriver, similar to but not quite the same as Pozidriv.

Phishing

Phishing is the criminal practice of sending emails or messages through social media inviting the recipient to open a malicious attachment or visit a malicious website.

Photon

A photon is a particle of light. Light has both wave-like and particle-like properties as described by Quantum Mechanics. If you don't understand that, don't worry. Nobody understands Quantum Mechanics.

Phototransistor

A phototransistor is a light-sensitive transistor used for sensing light.

Piezo

The piezo-electric effect is the property of some materials to develop a voltage across two opposite faces when a physical force is applied, or to stretch or squeeze slightly if a voltage is applied. Pronounced "pee-ayzo" by some and "pee-zo" by others. The Oxford Dictionary allows either, but wars have been started over less contentious issues. Used in some microphones and earpieces, quartz crystal frequency standards, and gas lighters.

Pinout

The pinout is a term used for the definition of the connections to each of the pins of a plug, a socket or an electronic component such as an integrated circuit with multiple connections.

PIR

A PIR or Passive Infrared detector is a device which detects heat radiation from warm bodies. Often used to turn on an outdoor security light, or to allow a room light to be turned off automatically when no one is there.

Pixel

A pixel is an individual picture element, or coloured (or black and white) dot, thousands or millions of which make up a digital image.

PNP

PNP is a type of junction transistor comprising a thin N-type layer sandwiched between two P-type layers.

Pot

A potentiometer (commonly known as a pot) is aresistor with a slider that can be moved along its length from one end to the other to tap off any required amount of resistance, for example for a volume control. See Potentiometer in the Wiki.

Potentiometer

A potentiometer (commonly known as a pot) is aresistor with a slider that can be moved along its length from one end to the other to tap off any required amount of resistance, for example for a volume control. See Potentiometer in the Wiki.

Power Supply

A PSU or Power Supply Unit is that part of a piece of equipment which takes the raw input power, for example from a battery or from the mains, conditions it, and delivers it at the voltage(s) the equipment needs internally.

Pozidriv

Pozidriv is a type of cross-head screw or screwdriver, similar to but not quite the same as Phillips.

PPE

PPE or Personal Protective Equipment is equipment such as safety glasses, dust and fumes extractors, respirators, ear plugs, protective clothing etc. used for protection against health and safety hazards.

Primary Battery

A primary battery is one which cannot be recharged but has to be thrown away (or recycled) once the chemicals it contains are exhausted.

PSU

A PSU or Power Supply Unit is that part of a piece of equipment which takes the raw input power, for example from a battery or from the mains, conditions it, and delivers it at the voltage(s) the equipment needs internally.

PUP

A PUP or Potentially Unwanted Program is any useless but generally (though not necessarily) harmless program, often installed by the computer vendor or (knowingly or unknowingly) installed along with downloaded software. The main purpose of it is usually to sell you some other software which you probably don't want.

PV Cell

A PV or Photo Voltaic Cell (commonly known as a solar cell) is a device for converting light into electricity.

Pwn

In hacker slang, to pwn (pronounced "pone") a device or computer is to hack and comprehensively take control of or "own" it. The term derives from a mis-typing of "own" in a video game in the 1990's.

Q
Qubit

A qubit is a quantum bit which can be in two different states simultaneously. We have never seen one of these at a Restart Party, and if we ever do we will probably be undecided about what to do with it.

R
RAM

RAM or Random Access Memory is the very fast memory used by a computer as working store for the programs and data currently being processed.

Ransomware

Ransomware is a particularly nasty form of Malware which encrypts all your files then demands a ransom in order to recover them for you. But there is no guarantee that you'll get you're data back even if you pay the ransom.

RAT

A RAT or Remote Access Trojan is a type of Malware which allows a remote attacker to see your screen, to move and click your mouse and to enter keystrokes on your keyboard, just as if he were sitting in your chair.

Rectifier

A rectifier consists of a diode or 4 diodes connected together to convert AC to DC.

Reed switch

A reed switch is a sealed glass tube containing two magnetic contacts forming a switch. The switch can be closed by bringing a magnet near or by energising an electromagnet. It can be used as the switch in a reed relay or with a magnet attached to a moving part, for example to detect when a cover is closed, a printer paper drawer is fully inserted, or a float in a tank is indicating that the tank is full.

Relay

A relay is a device consisting of a switch or a bank of switches operated by an electromagnet. The switch(es) may be simple switch contacts or a reed switch.

Reservoir Capacitor

A reservoir or smoothing capacitor is a large value capacitor used for smoothing rectified AC. See power supplies in the wiki.

Resistance

Resistance is the property of resisting the flow of an electric current, much like how mechanical friction resists motion. It is measured in Ohms.

Resistor

A resistor is an electronic component generally containing a thin metal or oxide film or a thin wire through which electricity flows with difficulty. It's resistance is measured in Ohms. A resistor always generates heat, even if only a tiny amount, and any replacement must be rated in Watts accordingly. See Resistors in the Wiki.

RF

RF or Radio Frequency is a high frequency capable of being transmitted as a radio signal.

Ripple

Ripple is the name given to the residual variation after smoothing in the output voltage of a DC power supply. It occurs at the frequency or twice the frequency of the AC mains input.

RJ11

RJ11 is a type of connector commonly used with telephones. It has up to 4 connections and a kind of barb which prevents it from being accidentally pulled out of a matching socket.

RJ45

RJ45 is a type of connector commonly used on network cables. It has 8 connections and a kind of barb which prevents it from being accidentally pulled out of a matching socket.

RMS

Since AC is continually varying it can't be measured as a unique voltage. The RMS or Root Mean Square value (a mathematical construct) is the DC voltage that would deliver the same power into a given load.

ROM

ROM or Read-only memory is memory which can be read as often as you like but cannot (or cannot so easily) be changed. It is typically used for the firmware of a device.

Rootkit

A rootkit is an especially pernicious type of malware which masks its presence and hinders its removal by subverting the operating system in such a way as to expunge all references to itself and associated malware in listings of files and running programs.

Router

A router is a network device connecting two or more networks. It forwards packets of data received from one network to its destination or to another router closer to its destination on another network.

S
Sandbox

A sandbox is a kind of software "padded cell" in which untested or untrusted software can be tried out without risk to the host computer, a bit like a sandbox in which a child can play safely with the sand.

Schematic

A schematic is another name for a Circuit Diagram.

SCR

A thyristor, SCR or Silicon Controlled Rectifier is an electronic component with 3 leads used as a switch. See Transistors in the Wiki.

Secondary Battery

A secondary battery is one which can be recharged, restoring the chemicals it contains to their original state (or nearly).

Sector

A sector is the smallest block of data a disk can read or write. On older disks this was normally 512 bytes but in modern disks and SSDs it is usually 4096 bytes.

Semiconductor

A semiconductor is a material such as silicon, germanium or gallium arsenide which can be made to conduct electricity either by negatively charged electrons (N-type) or by positively charged holes (P-type), by adding small amounts of carefully chosen impurities.

SES

SES or Small Edison Screw is a smaller version of the ES screw-fitting lamp base. See Types of bulb in the Wiki.

Seebeck

The Seebeck effect is a thermo-electric effect by which a voltage is generated by a junction between two different conductors or semiconductors if it is heated or cooled relative to the rest of the circuit. The converse of the Peltier effect. Used by space craft venturing to the outer reaches of the solar system to generate electricity from a radioactive heat source such as a lump of plutonium.

Shell

A shell is a program which offers a user interface to lower level parts of an operating system (referred to as the kernel), which themselves lack a user interface. The Mac or Linux command prompt is referred to as the shell, and the Windows Desktop is Windows' shell.

Short circuit

If two wires are touching which shouldn't the current may be able to take a short cut, meeting very little resistance and so allowing too much to flow. This is a Bad Thing and can cause your gadget to get hot or even catch fire. A short circuit can also be caused by an inadvertent solder bridge between two tracks on a printed circuit board, and this may simply cause the device to malfunction.

Shottky diode

A Shottky diode is a type of diode using a metal-semiconductor junction, mainly used in power supplies on account of its ability to operate efficiently at higher frequencies. See switching mode power supplies in the wiki.

SIL

SIL or Single In-Line is a type of packaging used for circuit sub-assemblies, resistor networks and some ICs, and having a single row of pins designed for through-hole assembly.

Sine wave

A sine wave is the mathematically simplest form of vibration or oscillation, which can be represented by a single frequency only with no harmonics or overtones. Exemplified by the motion of a pendulum swinging through a small angle, or the height of a point on a wheel above or below the axle as the wheel turns at constant speed.

S.M.A.R.T

S.M.A.R.T or Self-Monitoring, Analysis, and Reporting Technology is a technology built into all modern hard disks and solid state disks by which the device can monitor things like its error rate and report back, hopefully giving early warning of impending failure.

Smoothing

Smoothing is the process of turning raw rectified AC (which drops to zero twice in every cycle of the AC) into a reasonably constant voltage. See Why is a power supply needed? in the Wiki.

Snubber

A snubber is a circuit element designed to absorb the voltage spike which tends to be created when the current is abruptly switched off through an inductive load such as an electric motor, so protecting other parts of the circuit or other devices powered by the same source.

Software

Software is the step-by-step instructions which tell a computer what to do and how to do it.

Solder

Solder is a relatively low melting point mixture of (most often) tin and copper or tin and lead, making it very convenient for making electrical connections. (Americans call it "sodder", and many electrons have been harmed in discussions as to which is correct. But the Americans are on their own on this one.)

Solenoid

A solenoid is an inductor or electromagnet in cylindrical form.

Solid State Disk

A Solid State Disk (or SSD) is a faster (though more expensive) alternative to a hard disk for a computer's long term storage. Instead of a spinning magnetic disk, it stores data as trapped electrical charges in silicon chips. With no moving parts, it's much more robust than a hard disk. (It's a strange term in a way as it's no more solid than a hard disk.) See All about SSDs in the Wiki.

Source Code

Source code is software in a human-readable form as created by a developer. Generally, this cannot be directly understood or run by a computer, but has to be translated into object code by a special program called a compiler, or read, interpreted and executed line by line by a program known as an interpreter.

Spam

Spam is any unwanted email. This may simply be an irritation such as unwanted advertising but often it will be a scam or contain malicious attachments or links.

Spear Phishing

Spear phishing is a type of phishing attack directed at a specific victim who has probably been researched in order to make the attack seem highly plausible.

Spudger

A spudger is a tool with a thin plastic or metal blade typically used (for example) for inserting into the crack between two halves of a plastic case in order to pry it open.

Spyware

Spyware is a type of malware which reports browsing history and other personal information back to its creator without your permission.

SSD

A Solid State Disk (or SSD) is a faster (though more expensive) alternative to a hard disk for a computer's long term storage. Instead of a spinning magnetic disk, it stores data as trapped electrical charges in silicon chips. With no moving parts, it's much more robust than a hard disk. (It's a strange term in a way as it's no more solid than a hard disk.) See All about SSDs in the Wiki.

Superhet

A superhet is a common design of radio receiver in which the incoming signal, whatever its frequency, is converted into a fixed intermediate frequency to make it easier to tune and amplify. See Superhet in the Wiki.

Stepper Motor

A stepper motor is a type of motor which, instead of turning continuously, turns by a certain fraction of a revolution and stops every time it is given an electrical pulse. Used, for example, for stepping the paper through a printer as it is being printed. See DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors in the Wiki.

Surface_Mount

Surface mount is a method of manufacture in which electronic components are soldered directly onto the surface of a printed circuit board, as opposed to the older through-hole method.

SWG

SWG or Standard Wire Gauge is a set of wire diameters where each gauge is approximately 10% thinner than the previous. For example 16 gauge is 1/16in in diameter and 50 gauge is a thousanth of an inch. Cross sectional area in square millimeters is becoming a more usual measure. See Standard Wire Gauge in Wikipedia.

Switch-mode Regulator

A switch-mode regulator is a circuit which produces a constant well defined voltage from a variable or poorly defined voltage input, by switching the power on and off very rapidly and smoothing the result. See Switching Mode Power Supplies in the Wiki.

Synchronous motor

A synchronous motor is a type of electric motor which only runs on AC, and which runs at a speed which is locked to the AC supply frequency. See Synchronous Motors in the Wiki.

T
TB

A TB or Terabyte is 1000 gigabytes, but often used for 1024 gigabytes, which is more properly written TiB.

THD

THD or Total Harmonic Distortion is a measure of the degree to which an audio system distorts its input, effectively introducing new frequencies into the output.

Thermal Paste

Thermal paste is a paste with a special formulation making it a good conductor of heat, used to improve the transfer of heat from an electronic component to a heat sink.

Thermionic Valve

A thermionic valve or vacuum tube is an amplifying device consisting of a glass tube containing several electrodes in a vacuum. An electrically heated cathode emits electrons which are attracted by an anode. Their flow is controlled by the voltage on a wire mesh grid in their path. Long since superseded by much smaller and less power-hungry transistors in all but a few niche applications.

Thermistor

A thermistor is an electronic component like a resistor but with a resistance which decreases substantially with increasing temperature. Often used for measuring or monitoring temperature, for example to warn of a dangerous temperature rise in a lithium battery.

Through-hole

Through-hole is a method of manufacture in which electronic components are attached to a circuit board by passing their leads or pins through holes in the board and soldering them to the board on the other side, as opposed to the more modern surface mount technique which allows much higher component densities.

Thyristor

A thyristor, SCR or Silicon Controlled Rectifier is an electronic component with 3 leads used as a switch. See Transistors in the Wiki.

TiB

A TiB or terrabyte is 1,024GiB, or 1,099,511,627,776 bytes. It is as much as can be addressed with 40 bits.

Torque

Torque is a twisting force, such as applied by a screwdriver to a screw, a spanner to a nut, or produced by the spindle of an electric motor. It is measured in Newton Metres (Nm), being the twisting force created by a linear force of 1 Newton (102 grams weight on the earth) applied to a lever of length 1m, or twice the force applied to a lever of half the length etc.

Transducer

A transducer is any device which transforms energy or a measurement from one form to another, e.g. sound to/from electricity (speakers and microphones), or temperature, light, force etc. to an electrical signal.

Transformer

A transformer consists of two (or more) coils of wire wound around a magnetic core, used to step a voltage up or down or provide isolation between two circuits. See Transformers in the Wiki.

Transistor

A transistor is an electronic component with 3 leads used to amplify a signal or switch a current on or off. See Transistors in the Wiki.

Triac

A triac is a type of thyristor which, unlike the standard type, can be used on AC. Commonly used in dimmer switches.

TRIM

TRIM is a means by which an operating system can tell an SSD about files that have been deleted. This is important for performance reasons related to the way an SSD works. See SSD Migration and Troubleshooting in the wiki.

Triode

A triode is a device with three electrodes. Most commonly used to denote a type of valve.

Trojan

A trojan is a type of malware which hides inside legitimate software. Named after the Trojan horse used by the ancient Greeks to insinuate select warriors into the city of Troy and so defeat it.

Torx

Torx is a type of security screw or screwdriver with a 6-pointed star shape.

Two Factor Authentication

Two Factor Authentication or 2FA is a login scheme where you are required to supply not only a password ("something you know") but also prove your possession of a token of some sort ("something you have") or provide a biometric such as a fingerprint ("something you are"). This makes it very much harder to compromise.

Tuned Circuit

A tuned circuit comprises a capacitor and an inductor connected together. They resonate at a particular frequency as energy is continually and repeatedly passed from one to the other and back again.

Two Step Authentication

Two-step authentication is a kind of "poor man's Two factor Authentication" where the second factor is a one time code delivered to you by text message. Whilst considerably better than a password on its own, this is no longer greatly recommended on account of the relative ease by which a determined criminal could get a SIM card registered to your phone number and so get hold of the one time code. These "SIM swap" scams are endemic in some countries.

U
UEFI

UEFI or Unified Extensible Firmware Interface is a program built in to newer PCs (since around 2011) which controls the PC prior to booting and initiates the boot process. (Older computers used BIOS). See BIOS vs UEFI in the Wiki.

Universal Motor

An AC/DC or Universal motor is a type of electric motor that runs equally well on AC or DC. See DC and Universal (AC/DC) Motors in the Wiki.

V
Vacuum Tube

A thermionic valve or vacuum tube is an amplifying device consisting of a glass tube containing several electrodes in a vacuum. An electrically heated cathode emits electrons which are attracted by an anode. Their flow is controlled by the voltage on a wire mesh grid in their path. Long since superseded by much smaller and less power-hungry transistors in all but a few niche applications.

Valve

A thermionic valve or vacuum tube is an amplifying device consisting of a glass tube containing several electrodes in a vacuum. An electrically heated cathode emits electrons which are attracted by an anode. Their flow is controlled by the voltage on a wire mesh grid in their path. Long since superseded by much smaller and less power-hungry transistors in all but a few niche applications.

Varistor

A Voltage Dependent Resistor or varistor is a device which has a very high resistance until a certain voltage is reached, whereupon its resistance falls sharply. Used for absorbing transient voltage surges in a mains supply.

VDR

A Voltage Dependent Resistor or varistor is a device which has a very high resistance until a certain voltage is reached, whereupon its resistance falls sharply. Used for absorbing transient voltage surges in a mains supply.

Virus

A virus is a term commonly used for any type of malware, but strictly meaning malware which self-replicates like a biological virus.

Volt

The Volt is the unit of electrical pressure, a bit like water pressure. Named after Italian physicist and chemist Alessandro Volta who is credited with the invention of the battery. See Electric circuits, volts amps watts and ohms in the Wiki.

Vulnerability

A vulnerability is a flaw in a website or software product by which it can be compromised for malicious purposes, whatever they might be.

W
WAN

A WAN or Wide Area Network is a computer network spanning a substantial geographical area.

Watt

The Watt is the unit of power, calculated by multiplying the Volts by the Amps. Named after Scottish inventor, mechanical engineer and chemist James Watt, who invented the first truly practical steam engine. See Electric circuits, volts amps watts and ohms in the Wiki.

Wavelength

Wavelength is the distance between successive crests of a radio wave as it travels through the air. If you divide the speed of light (300,000,000 m/s) by the wavelength you get the frequency, or by the frequency to get the wavelength. See Freqvency vs wavelength in the Wiki.

WiFi

WiFi is a family of wireless local area networking protocols, allowing a number of computers and other devices within a reasonably confined space to talk to each other.

Worm

A worm is a type of malware able to spread from one computer to another across a network, or across the whole Internet.

X
XP

Windows XP is an obsolete Windows operating system first released in 2001. Extended support ended in 2014 and remaining users are strongly advised to migrate to a supported operating system as security patches are no longer provided.

x86

x86 is the Intel CPU architecture derived originally from the 8086 chip, released in 1978. Subsequent generations of chip were the 80286 (often referred to simply as 286), 386, 486 and 586 also known as Pentium. From 386 on, these were all 32 bit architectures.

Y
Yagi

Yagi is a type of aerial commonly used for terrestrial television reception, and consisting of an array of parallel rods, the array pointing in the direction of the transmitter.

Z
Zener diode

A zener diode is a type of diode which starts conducting in the reverse (normally non-conducting) direction at a well defined voltage, often used in electronic circuits to define a threshold or specific voltage.

Zero Day

A zero-day is a vulnerability that is found and already being exploited by malicious actors before any fix is available, giving potential victims no time at all (zero days) in which to protect themselves. Also known as an 0-Day (pronounced "oh-day").