Rockstar Consortium US LP et al v. Google Inc
Filing
158
CLAIM CONSTRUCTION BRIEF filed by NetStar Technologies LLC, Rockstar Consortium US LP. (Attachments: # 1 Appendix A, # 2 Exhibit 1 - 969 patent, # 3 Exhibit 2 - 245 patent, # 4 Exhibit 3 - 970 patent, # 5 Exhibit 4 - 178 patent, # 6 Exhibit 5 - 183 patent, # 7 Exhibit 6 - 883 patent, # 8 Exhibit 7 - Barron's 5th ed. - client and server, # 9 Exhibit 8 - Webster's 8th ed. - client, # 10 Exhibit 9 - Newton's Telecom - client and server, # 11 Exhibit 10 - Webster's College 1999 - interface, # 12 Exhibit 11 - Federal Standard 1037C - link, # 13 Exhibit 12 - NTC Am English Learners - correlate and match, # 14 Exhibit 13 - Webster's College 1999 - database, # 15 Exhibit 14 - Newton's Telecom - database, # 16 Exhibit 15 - Modern Dictionary of Electronics - database, # 17 Exhibit 16 Dictionary of Computer and Internet Terms - database, # 18 Exhibit 17 Webster's Third Intl - refine, # 19 Exhibit 18 Webster's College 1999 - refine, # 20 Exhibit 19 - IBM Dictionary - sort, # 21 Exhibit 20 - Roget's Thesaurus - change and update)(Tribble, Max)
Exhibit 7
Dictionary of
Computer and
Internet Terms
Fifth Edition
Douglas A. Dowining, Ph.D.
School of Business and Economics
Seattle Pacific University
Michael A. Covington, Ph.D.
Artificial Intelligence Center
The University of Georgia
Melody Mauldin Covington
Graphic Designer
Athens, Georgia
BARRON'S
(D Copyright 1996 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc.
Prior editions @ copyright 1995, 1992, 1989, and 1986
by Barron's Educational Series, Inc.
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by photostat, microfilm,
xerography, or any other means, or incorporated into any information
retrieval system, electronic or mechanical, without the written permission
of the copyright owner.
All inquiries should be addressed to:
Barron's Educational Series, Inc.
250 Wireless Boulevard
Hauppauge, New York 11788
Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 96-9250
International Standard Book No. 0-8120-9811-0
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Downing, Douglas.
Dictionary of computer terms / Douglas A. Downing, Michael
Covington, Melody Mauldin Covington-5th ed.
p.
CM.
Previous eds. published under title: Dictionary of computer terms.
ISBN 0-8120-9811-0
2. Internet (Computer network)—
1. Computers—Dictionaries.
Dictionaries.
. II. Covington,
I. Covington, Michael A., 1957–
Melody Mauldin. III. Downing, Douglas. Dictionary of computer
terms. IV. Title.
QA76.15.D667
1996
004'.03—dc20
96-9250
CIP
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
9876
4P
70
CLICK
CLICK to press one mouse button very briefly (usually the leftmost
button, if there is more than one). Contrast PRESS; DOUBLE-CLICK. See
also WINDOW.
WEB PAGE or in a HYPERTEXT
which the user can select, by clicking with the mouse, in
DOCUMENT
order to call up further information.
CLIENT a computer that receives services from another computer, or
(on multitasking operating systems) a process that receives services
from another process. The machine or process that is supplying the
services is called the server. See SERVER; X SERVER; DDE; OLE.
CLICKABLE IMAGE a picture on a
FIGURE 51. CLIP ART EXAMPLES
CLIP ART artwork that can be freely reproduced. Many of the pictures in
newspaper advertisements come from clip art. Many clip art collections
are available on diskettes or CD-ROMs for use with various drawing,
painting, and desktop publishing programs.
CLIPBOARD on the Macintosh and in Microsoft Windows and OS/2, a
holding area to which information can be copied in order to transfer it
from one application program to another. For instance, the Clipboard
can be used to transfer text from a word processor into a drawing
program.
Be aware that the contents of the Clipboard vanish when the computer is turned off. Also, only one item at a time can be on the Clipboard; the next CUT or COPY command will replace the old item with
a new one.
CLIPPING (Macintosh System 7.5) a fragment of text or graphic image
that can be moved from one application to another simply by dragging
the item with the mouse (see DRAG AND DROP). The clipping may even
remain on the Desktop until needed. This provides another way (other
341
SERVER
SERIAL-ACCESS DEVICE see
SEQUENTIAL-ACCESS DEVICE.
SERIAL MOUSE a mouse that is attached to a serial port of a computer.
See MOUSE.
SERIAL PORT a connection by which a computer can transmit data to
another device using serial transmission — that is, one bit at a time.
It is usual for a microcomputer to have a serial port that is connected
to a modem or printer. IBM PC-compatible computers typically have
two serial ports labelled COM1 and COM2; UNIX systems often
identify their serial ports as /dev/ttya and /dev/ttyb. Most serial
ports follow the EIA-232D (RS-232) standard. See RS-232. Contrast
PARALLEL PORT.
SERIAL PRINTER a printer that connects to a computer's serial port.
See SERIAL PORT; PARALLEL PORT.
AAAP-FIGURE 200. SERIES CIRCUIT (TWO RESISTORS)
SERIES connection of two electronic components so that current flows
through one and then the other (see Figure 200). Contrast PARALLEL.
S eri f
FIGURE 201. SERIFS ON LETTERS
SERIF the short finishing strokes of the letterfonns in a roman typeface,
present in I F A and absent in I F A (Fig. 201). It is thought that the
horizontal nature of serifs helps guide the reader's eye along the line
of type.
SERVER a computer that provides services to another computer (called
the client). On multitasking machines, a process that provides services
to another process is sometimes called a server. For specific examples,
see FILE SERVER; X SERVER; DDE.
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