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virtual |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
virtualRefers to a condition without boundaries or constraints. It is often used to define a feature or state that is simulated in some manner. The term has a very high-tech ring and may be used with "virtually" any hardware or software product or Internet-related service that has expanded beyond the norm. At the end of this explanation are most of the "virtual" terms in this Encyclopedia. Major Virtual Technologies virtual memory virtual machine and virtual machine monitor virtual desktop virtual appliance network virtualization OS virtualization server virtualization storage virtualization Java Virtual Machine virtual private network (see VPN) Other Virtual Terms virtual 8086 Mode virtual autopsy virtual circuit virtual community virtual companion virtual company virtual connection virtual database virtual datacenter (see datacenter container) virtual desktop services virtual device driver (see VxD) Virtual Device Interface (see VDI) virtual directory virtual disk Virtual DOS Machine virtual drive virtual environment Virtual Execution System (see VES) virtual folder virtual function virtual greeting card (see e-card) virtual headphones virtual host virtual hypertext virtual image virtual IP address virtual ISP virtual keyboard virtual LAN virtual library Virtual Machine Manager virtual mentoring virtual monitor Virtual network virtual network computing (see VNC) virtual newscaster Virtual PC Virtual PC for Mac virtual peripheral virtual phone number virtual printer virtual printer port virtual processor virtual reality virtual root virtual routing virtual screen virtual server virtual storage virtual store virtual supercomputer virtual surround sound (see 3D audio) virtual tape virtual tape library virtual tape system virtual terminal virtual toolkit virtual voice mail virtual workgroup virtual world virtualization virtualize AMD Virtualization (see AMD-V) application virtualization desktop virtualization full virtualization hardware virtualization paravirtualization hardware virtual memory augmented virtuality (see mixed reality) computer automatic virtual environment (see CAVE) Global Virtual Private Network (see GVPN) Intel Virtualization Technology (see VT) K Virtual Machine (see KVM) Microsoft Virtual Machine Microsoft Virtual Server permanent virtual circuit (see PVC) switched virtual circuit (see SVC) virtual 1. Physics being, relating to, or involving a virtual image 2. of or relating to a computer technique by which a person, wearing a headset or mask, has the experience of being in an environment created by the computer, and of interacting with and causing changes in it 3. Physics designating or relating to a particle exchanged between other particles that are interacting by a field of force
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Foreign military experts hold that, despite the virtuality of information space, the seizure and retention of information advantage (similar to land, sea, air and space supremacy) will yield gross dividends to those, who possess it. His aim, once you have got through the verbal convolutions at the beginning, is about the possibilities involved in merging digital virtuality with materiality--to use the latter word in a sense unfamiliar to many architecture dominees. Yoshio Taniguchi, the architect of the new MOMA, is a master of such light construction, and Terry Riley, chief curator of architecture there, is a great advocate, Riley (who has announced his departure from MOMA next March) thinks such transparency is true both to the precepts of modernist design and to the virtuality of the digital world, and so perfect for the museum today. |
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