| real time |
A transmission or data processing mode in which the data is entered in an interactive session where an application can respond fast enough to affect later data input.
Ãâó: www.quadron.com/speed/speed.html
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|---|---|
| reality |
is strange psych music. -- Andras Sumegi
Ãâó: www.gepr.net/sa.html
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| real time |
The processing of information that returns a result so rapidly that the interaction appears to be instantaneous. Telephone calls and videoconferencing are examples of real-time applications.
Ãâó: www.mtholyoke.edu/lits/csit/vidconf/glossary.shtml
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| real time |
Computer speed coinciding with the speed of the user; with no delay between computer response time and the user; instantaneous.
Ãâó: www.cybernet1.com/hcs/glossary.htm
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| reality |
What we perceive as reality is a tiny detail from the field of possibilities surging around us which our nervous system has realized through computation. If all reality is a computation from possibilities, then "reality" is a threshold value.
Ãâó: www.equivalence.com/labor/lab_vf_glo_e.shtml
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| real | a new apportionment (especially a reallotment of congressional seats in the United States on the basis of census results) |
|---|---|
| real | a share that has been allocated again |
| real | alot again |
| real | a new apportionment (especially a reallotment of congressional seats in the United States on the basis of census results) |
| real | used as intensifiers |
| real | in accordance with truth or fact or reality |
| real | (used as intensifiers or sentence modifiers) "in truth, moral decay hastened the decline of the Roman Empire" |
| real | in actual fact |
| real | a knowledge domain that you are interested in or are communicating about |
| real | the domain ruled by a king or queen |
| real | a domain in which something is dominant |
| real | the state of being actual or real |
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