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CompTIA A+ Part2 - Acronyms and Addresses


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ACPI
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An open standard to communicate between the operating system and hardware to enable power management features.

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CompTIA A+ Part2 - Acronyms and Addresses - Detalles

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ACPI
An open standard to communicate between the operating system and hardware to enable power management features.
CLI
A textual interface based on the operating system, where a user typically enters commands at the command prompt to instruct the computer to perform a specific task.
ExFAT
A file system designed for flash memory cards and memory sticks.
FAT
A basic disk format allowing the OS to write data as files on a disk. The original 16-bit version (FAT16, but often simply called FAT) was replaced by a 32-bit version that is almost universally supported by different operating systems and devices.
GPT
A modern disk partitioning system allowing large numbers of partitions and very large partition sizes.
HCL
Hardware Compatibility List
MBR
A sector on a hard disk storing information about partitions configured on the disk.
RAID 0
(Striping) Taking a number of disks and merging them into one large volume.
RAID 1
(Mirroring) Mirror information form one disk to another, creating two identical disks
RAID 5
(Striping + Distributed Parity) Strips data across multiple drivees and adds an aspect of redundancy by distributing parity information across all disks. At least 3 disks needed. 1 can fail and be replaced at a time
RAID 6
(Striping + Distributed Parity) Strips data across multiple drivees and adds an aspect of redundancy by distributing parity information across all disks. At least 4 disks needed. 2 can fail and be replaced at a time.
RAID 10 (RAID 1+0)
(Mirroring + Striping) combines RAID 1 and RAID 0. At least 4 drives are needed. Info is striped across 2 drives, the remaining 2 drives are mirrors of the striped drives.
UAC
A security system in Windows designed to restrict abuse of accounts with administrator privileges.
VBR
Loads the boot manager, which for Windows is bootmgr.exe.
AUP
A policy that governs employees' use of company equipment and Internet services. ISPs may also apply AUPs to their customers.
CAB
In change management, the team responsible for approving or denying RFCs.
CI
In change management, an asset that requires specific management procedures for it to be used to deliver the service.
CMDB
In change management, the database in which configuration items are stored, identified using a label and defined by their attributes.
CMS
The tools and databases that collect, store, manage, update, and present information about CIs.
ESD
Electrostatic discharge
IDE (programming)
A programming environment that typically includes a code editor containing an autocomplete feature to help you write code, a debugger to help you find coding errors, and an interpreter that translates the script file code into machine readable code the computer can execute.
KB
A searchable database of product FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions), advice, and known troubleshooting issues.
MSDS
Information sheet accompanying hazardous products or substances explaining the proper procedures for handling and disposal.
MTBF
The rating on a device or component that predicts the expected time between failures.
PDU
A device designed to provide power to devices that require power, and may or may not support remote monitoring and access.
RFC
In change management, the formal document submitted to the CAB that has the details of the proposed alteration.
RPO
The amount of data loss that a system can sustain, measured in time. See also recovery time objective.
RTO
The period following a disaster that a system may remain offline. See also recovery point objective.
SOP
Standard Operating Procedure
UPS
An alternative AC power supply in the event of power failure. A UPS requires an array of batteries, a charging circuit, an inverter to convert DC to AC current, a circuit to allow the system to take over from a failing power supply, and some degree of spike, surge, or brownout protection (possibly including a line conditioner).
Regex
Strings of characters that denote a word, a set of words, or a sentence.
Rpm
A tool for maintaining packages in Red Hat Linux systems.
Unified file system
Everything available to the Linux OS is represented as a file in the file system, including devices.
XML
A system for structuring documents so that they are human- and machine-readable. Information within the document is placed within tags, which describe how information within the document is structured.
BCD
Windows stores information about operating systems installed on the computer in a boot configuration data store, located in \boot\bcd on the system partition.
BSOD
A condition that indicates an error from which the system cannot recover (also called a stop error).
COM+
Microsoft's object-oriented programming architecture and operating system services for developing applications. See also Component Services.
PID
The number assigned to a process.
ICMP
IP-level protocol for reporting errors and status information supporting the function of troubleshooting utilities such as ping.
Ipconfig
Displays configuration of network adapters
Ping
Tests reachability of a remote computer over the network
First step in configuring folder redirection
Create a security group for folder redirection and add group members.
Tracert
Displays what network devices a packet goes through to reach a remote computer.
Second step in configuring folder redirection
Create a network file share to use for folder redirection.
Netstat
Displays network statistics on data transfers, ports, and applications
Third step in configuring folder redirection
Create a folder redirection group policy object.