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L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r ’ s G u i d e
Disk Drive
The hardware which spins the disk and has the heads
and control circuitry for reading and writing the data
on the disk.
Diskette
A floppy disk in a hard housing with a shutter.
DMA
Direct Memory Access. Special circuitry for memory to
memory transfers of data which do not require CPU
action.
DMI
Desktop Management Interface. A standard that
provides PC management applications with a common
method of locally or remotely querying and configuring
PC computer systems, hardware and software compo-
nents, and peripherals.
DOS
Disk Operating System (MS-DOS is a Microsoft Disk
Operating System).
Driver
A computer program which converts application and
operating system commands to external devices into the
exact form required by a specific brand and model of
device in order to produce the desired results from that
particular equipment.
DVD
Digital Video Disc. This is a form of optical disc storage
for video, audio and computer data, envisioned to
replace current digital storage formats (CD-ROM, laser
and audio CD) because of its capability for storing
greater amounts of data. A typical single layer, single-
sided DVD, for example, can contain 4.7GB of data and
a maximum of 17GB for the double-sided discs.
ECP
Extended Capability Port. A set of standards for high
speed data communication and interconnection
between electronic devices.
ESD
Electrostatic Discharge. The sudden discharge of elec-
tricity from a static charge which has built-up slowly.
Example: the shock you get from a doorknob on a dry day
or the sparks you get from brushing hair on a dry day.
Extended Memory
All memory more than the 640KB recognized by
MS-DOS as system memory.
FCC
Federal Communication Commission.
Floppy Disk
A spinning platter of magnetic data storage media which
is highly flexible.
GB
Gigabyte.
Hard drive
A spinning platter of magnetic data storage media where
the platter is very stiff.
Hexadecimal
A decimal notation for the value of a 4 bit binary
number. (0-9, A, B, C, D, E, F) Example: 2F in hexa-
decimal = 00101111 in binary = 47 in decimal.
I/O
Input/Output. Data entering and leaving your LifeBook
notebook in electronic form.
I/O Port
The connector and associated control circuits for data
entering and leaving your LifeBook notebook in elec-
tronic form.
IDE
Intelligent Drive Electronics. A type of control interface
for a hard drive which is inside the hard drive unit.
IEEE 1394
A type of data transfer protocol that allows for fast
transfer of digital files and data with devices such as
digital cameras.
Infrared
Light just beyond the red portion of the visible light
spectrum which is invisible to humans.
IR
An abbreviation for infrared.
IrDA
Infrared Data Association. An organization which
produces standards for communication using infrared
as the carrier.
IRQ
Interrupt Request. An acronym for the hardware signal
to the CPU that an external event has occurred which
needs to be processed.
pearl.book Page 82 Friday, October 1, 2004 5:13 PM
Summary of Contents for Lifebook N6010A
Page 6: ...L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 7: ...1 1 Preface ...
Page 8: ...2 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 10: ...4 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 11: ...5 2 Getting to Know Your LifeBook Notebook ...
Page 12: ...6 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 27: ...21 3 Getting Started ...
Page 28: ...22 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 36: ...30 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 37: ...31 4 User Installable Features ...
Page 38: ...32 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 46: ...40 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 56: ...50 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 57: ...51 5 Troubleshooting ...
Page 58: ...52 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 69: ...63 T r o u b l e s h o o t i n g ...
Page 72: ...66 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 73: ...67 6 Care and Maintenance ...
Page 74: ...68 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 78: ...72 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 79: ...73 7 Specifications ...
Page 80: ...74 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 84: ...78 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 85: ...79 8 Glossary ...
Page 86: ...80 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 94: ...88 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 95: ...89 Appendix Integrated Wireless LAN User s Guide ...
Page 96: ...90 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 110: ...104 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 111: ...105 Index ...
Page 112: ...106 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...
Page 116: ...110 L i f e B o o k N S e r i e s U s e r s G u i d e ...