|
| |
| | Machine-readable - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The term machine-readable (or computer-readable) refers to information encoded in a form which can be read (i.e., scanned/sensed) by a machine/computer and interpreted by the machine's hardware and/or software. |
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machine-readable
|
|
| |
| | Machine Readable Records |
 | | Machine readable records cannot be stored in an attic or basement and reclaimed after years of neglect. |  | | Machine readable records are also sensitive to their environment, making environmental controls a requirement. |  | | Machine readable technologies provide versatile methods for recording and storing information beyond the capability of conventional paper-based records. |
|
http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/byorg/georgia/mach.html
|
|
| |
| | SMBmeta Introduction |
 | | The smbmeta.xml file is an XML file stored at the top level of a domain that contains machine readable information about the business the web site is connected to. |  | | Machine readable files like RSS, and shared, open-to-all event-aggregation services like weblogs.com have been a boon to the weblogging community. |  | | First: We learn that simple, easily created XML data files hosted along with human readable content are a valuable thing. |
|
http://www.trellixtech.com/smbmetaintro.html
|
|
| |
| | jacobs.2n1 |
 | | Data consultation services can be offered when there is machine- readable information on campus, whether it is acquired by the library or by another agency on campus. |  | | Although this may not seem to be an immediate prospect, libraries that are government depositories are already having to decide whether or not to accept machine- readable depository items. |  | | Even if users have their own computers, they must somehow obtain data files they want in formats compatible with their machines and then manage to load them physically into their machines. |
|
http://info.lib.uh.edu/pr/v2/n1/jacobs.2n1
|
|
| |
| | ANSDIT - The letter "M" |
 | | An artificial language composed only of the machine instructions of a specific computer or class of computers. |  | | A machine instruction is an element of a machine language. |  | | A programming language, the simple statements of which have the same or similar structure as the machine instructions of a specific computer or of a class of computers. |
|
http://www.ncits.org/tc_home/k5htm/m1.htm
(2158 words)
|
|
| |
| | Machine-readable Tables |
 | | Unlike the normal ASCII tables which only contain the raw, tab delimitted data, these machine readable tables are formatted in a standard way so that the information can be easily read into a computer. |  | | Machine readable tables provide two important benefits to the AAS Journals. |  | | In addition, each file includes a meta-data header which documents the format and some of the scientific content of the table including units and a short description of each column. |
|
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/ApJ/mrt/MRT_AAS.html
(2158 words)
|
|
| |
| | [76.04] Creation and Manipulation tools for Machine Readable Tables in the AAS Journals |
 | | One of the most popular types utilized by authors are the machine readable tables which are formatted ASCII tables. |  | | The machine readable format is ideal for long tables for both authors and readers. |  | | In addition, the machine readable tables in these papers are currently accessed on average 20 times each day. |
|
http://www.aas.org/publications/baas/v34n4/aas201/1200.htm
(2158 words)
|
|
| |
| | RFC 582 (rfc582) - Comments on RFC 580: Machine readable protocols |
 | | Network Working Group R. Clements Request for Comments: 582 BBN-TENEX NIC: 19962 5 November 1973 Comments on RFC 580 - Machine Readable Protocols I fully support the requirement for machine-readable protocol documents. |  | | Those persons should be able to prepare the documents in the home machine (or wherever) in languages with which they are familiar. |  | | Perhaps the program which receives mail for the journal will do the trick; if so it needs further documentation beyond the mail-oriented RFC 543, and its existence and usage need to be publicised. |
|
http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc582.html
(2158 words)
|
|
| |
| | Machine-readable - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The term machine-readable (or computer-readable) refers to information encoded in a form which can be read (i.e., scanned/sensed) by a machine/computer and interpreted by the machine's hardware and/or software. |
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machine-readable
(64 words)
|
|
| |
| | US Requires Machine Readable Passports From Australian Citizens on 26 October |
 | | The old one, however, was designed to be machine readable (with the right coding on the ID page) but JFK machines were illiterate at the time. |  | | A machine readable passport has biographical data entered on the data page according to international specifications. |  | | The machine readbility is merely the letters and "andgt;"s at the bottom of the ID page - not exactly the height of technology. |
|
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/showthread.php?t=81134
(64 words)
|
|
| |
| | United States Patent Application: 0040091232 |
 | | The machine-readable medium of claim 41, wherein the machine is constructed and arranged (i) to send, through a network coupled to the machine, a request to order information representing the song, and (ii) to receive, through the network, information representing the presentation theme in response to the sent request. |  | | The machine of claim 30, wherein the network is constructed and arranged to be a private network for users of the first mentioned machine. |  | | The machine of claim 30, wherein the identifier is used to identify a user of the first mentioned machine. |
|
http://appft1.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PG01&p=1&u=/netahtml/PTO/srchnum.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1="20040091232".PGNR.&OS=DN/20040091232&RS=DN/20040091232
(8175 words)
|
|
| |
| | Handling MARC with Perl |
 | | The MAchine Readable Catalogue (MARC) format is probably one of the oldest and most widely used metadata formats today. |  | | It contains enough information to allow machines with what we would now consider to be very small memories to load just the parts of a MARC record that they are interested in whilst skipping over the rest. |  | | It was also designed with some of the popular computer languages of the time in mind, with a fixed length record header that would be easy to read into the data structures available. |
|
http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue7/marc
(8175 words)
|
|
| |
| | World Intellectual Property Organization |
 | | The machine-readable medium of claim 26, wherein the first learning mechanism is one of a genetic algorithm and a neural network algorithm. |  | | The machine-readable medium of claim 52, wherein the learning mechanism is one of a genetic algorithm and a neural network algorithm. |  | | The machine-readable medium of claim 26, wherein the community environment is a peer-to-peer community environment. |
|
http://www.wipo.int/ipdl/IPDL-CIMAGES/view/pct/getbykey5?KEY=03/88061.031023&ELEMENT_SET=DECL
(10135 words)
|
|
| |
| | The Machine Readable Web |
 | | The key will be for content providers to adopt a richer set of machine readable formats like they have started to do for RSS and keeping it as simple as possible so a wide variety of software developers can provide tools for the end users. |  | | So a machine readable Web is starting to become a reality with RSS and Web services and may progress even further with something like machine-to-machine or the semantic Web. |  | | The content providers need to have a relatively easy way to provide the machine readable content and it has to fit in with their mission. |
|
http://www.contentmanagementnews.com/2005/0524.html
(10135 words)
|
|
| |
| | An introduction to Tim Berners-Lee's Semantic Web |
 | | This structure turns out to be a natural way to describe the majority of data processed by machines. |  | | In its simplest form, this includes stating facts such as ''a hex-head bolt is a type of machine bolt," but extends to the formation of complicated relationships. |  | | In RDF, a document makes assertions that particular things have properties (such as "is a brother of," "is the CEO of") with certain values. |
|
http://techrepublic.com.com/5100-3513_11-5552998.html?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=tr
(10135 words)
|
|
| |
| | World Intellectual Property Organization |
 | | A machine-readable medium with instructions thereon, the instructions when executed operable to cause a computer to: determine the complexity within the image; divide the image into regions of similar complexity; compress each region independently; and store the independently compressed image regions and map data representing the location of each region within a file. |  | | Various methods of practicing the invention are implemented in some embodiments by execution of instructions loaded from a machine-readable medium such as the computer diskette shown at 301 of Figure 3. |  | | The machine-readable medium of claim 14, wherein division of the image into regions of similar complexity comprises texture flow computation and boundary detection. |
|
http://www.wipo.int/ipdl/IPDL-CIMAGES/view/pct/getbykey5?KEY=01/69937.010920&ELEMENT_SET=DECL
(2974 words)
|
|
| |
| | Smart channel entry system - Patent 6766526 |
 | | The machine-readable medium defined in claim 11 wherein the program listings information is displayed on the user input device. |  | | The machine-readable medium defined in claim 11 wherein the displayed program listings information includes a title of a program. |  | | The machine-readable medium defined in claim 11 wherein the displayed program listings information includes a channel designator. |
|
http://www.freepatentsonline.com/6766526.html
(8607 words)
|
|
| |
| | MARC Glossary |
 | | MARC Cataloging is the process of recording bibliographic information about an item and then coding that information for the machine. |  | | This information is not visible to the inputting cataloger or the catalog user; it is generated automatically by the system. |  | | For example, Summary: is used as the first word of a summary note within a catalog record but does not have to be included in the catalog record because the MARC coding instructs the computer to print or display this text whenever the note is printed. |
|
http://www.wils.wisc.edu/events/bktaging/gloss.htm
(8607 words)
|
|
| |
| | LegalTips.ORG - Texas LOCAL GOVERNMENT CODE - CHAPTER 205 |
 | | In this chapter: (1) "Electronic storage" means the maintenance of local government record data in the form of digital electronic signals on a computer hard disk, magnetic tape, optical disk, or similar machine-readable medium. |
|
http://www.legaltips.org/texas/LG/lg.006.00.000205.00.aspx
(535 words)
|
|
| |
| | Method and apparatus for establishing the legitimacy of use of a block of digitally represented information - Patent 5893910 |
 | | A machine readable storage medium for directing a client computer to perform an operation for establishing a legitimacy of usage of a block of digitally stored information residing in a memory associated with said client computer, said storage medium comprising; |  | | A machine readable storage medium for directing a client computer to audit a block of digitally represented information stored in a memory associated with said client computer to determine the legitimate usage of the digitally represented information, said machine readable medium comprising; |  | | As embodied and broadly described herein, the invention also provides a machine readable storage medium for directing a computer to perform an operation for establishing a legitimacy of usage of a block of digitally stored information residing in a memory of said computer, said storage medium comprising: |
|
http://www.freepatentsonline.com/5893910.html
(9627 words)
|
|
| |
| | dillon.rtf |
 | | Willingness to catalog 30 computer files within the three-week time-frame of the experiment from May 11-29, 1992. |  | | A systematic experiment was devised to ascertain (1) difficulties encountered by cataloging librarians in determining bibliographic data based on an examination of electronic information objects, and (2) deficiencies in (a) the USMARC format for computer files or (b) the Anglo-American Cataloging Rules, second edition, revised. |  | | The information files contained data related to its associated computer file such as the size of the file in bytes, the original file name, the source from which project staff obtained the file, and additional information for use by project staff only. |
|
http://www.cni.org/docs/illinois.dpc/dillon.html
(9627 words)
|
|
| |
| | MARSEC: The Machine Readable Spoken English Corpus |
 | | This file can be decoded on a PC using a program such as winzip and on a UNIX machine by using the tar command (tar -xf marsec-data.tar) to unarchive the data files into the current directory. |  | | Those of you using the Waves+ package from Entropic may find this header file useful. |  | | Note: when you click on the download data button you will be sent a tar file. |
|
http://www.rdg.ac.uk/AcaDepts/ll/speechlab/marsec
(9627 words)
|
|
| |
| | US/Mexico Border Crossing Cards (BCCs): |
 | | Because the cards are machine readable, they can assuming card readers are in place be swiped upon exit from, as well as entry into, the US, thus giving the INS some handle on the problem of cardholders overstaying the 72-hour limit. |  | | In other words, either each employer, or the third-party services, would need machine readers for this scheme to work. |  | | Without the machines, US authorities must eyeball them the same way they did the old ones, in essence rendering the new security features meaningless. |
|
http://www.sonic.net/~undoc/bccnew.htm
(9627 words)
|
|
| |
| | Media Cataloging: Whither? |
 | | However, it has always been taken for granted that catalogers had a moderate understanding of the physical characteristics of the materials to be cataloged, in order to interpret the rules from the perspective of use and user need (Intner 1991, 4). |  | | At the time, the principal cataloging code for libraries in the United States, Canada and Great Britain was the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules (AACR), which provided at best complex and sometimes inconsistent directions in their approach to non-book formats. |  | | In March 1994 the Cataloging Committee of the Instructional Media Consortium of the CUNY Council of Educational Communications and Technology (IMC-CECT) conducted an informal survey in order to try to shed light on this perplexing issue. |
|
http://wings.buffalo.edu/publications/mcjrnl/v2n2/adler.html
(9627 words)
|
|
| |
| | MARC - MAchine Readable Cataloging, Multitechnology Automated Reader Card |
 | | "The MARC formats are standards for the representation and communication of bibliographic and related information in machine readable form." The MARC formats contain an explicit set of rules for the structure of fields and the content values within those fields. |  | | (Machine Readable Cataloging) -- A standardized format developed by the Library of Congress for identifying all elements of bibliographic information of a cataloging record so that each element can be uniquely recognized and manipulated by a computer. |  | | Machine Readable Cataloging Record which uses tags, indicators, and delimiters to identify and separate information on the bibliographic or authority record. |
|
http://www.auditmypc.com/acronym/MARC.asp
(9627 words)
|
|
| |
| | COPYRIGHT PROTECTION OF SOFTWARE IN INDIA |
 | | According to Sec 2 (ffc) of the Act, computer programme means a set of instructions expressed in words, codes, schemes or in any other form, including machine-readable medium, capable of causing a computer to perform a particular task or achieve a particular result. |  | | Thus it can be argued that, since humans alone can do the task and the machine is being made to operate on data to produce the desired results, thus in essence it seems that nothing other than an instruction about how to perform an intellectual task is being given. |  | | Simply put computer software also referred to, as computer programs are the instructions executed by a computer. |
|
http://www.asianlaws.org/projects/copyright_sw.htm
(4729 words)
|
|
| |
| | Machine Readable Records |
 | | Machine readable records cannot be stored in an attic or basement and reclaimed after years of neglect. |  | | Machine readable records are also sensitive to their environment, making environmental controls a requirement. |  | | However, machine readable records require a proactive response from their custodians to ensure the long-term preservation of information. |
|
http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/byorg/georgia/mach.html
(1252 words)
|
|
| |
| | Google Patent - Detecting query-specific duplicate documents |
 | | At least a portion of the machine executable instructions may be stored (temporarily or more permanently) on the storage device(s) 1320 and/or may be received from an external source via an input interface unit 1330. |  | | In one embodiment, the machine 1300 may be one or more conventional personal computers. |  | | The machine 1300 basically includes a processor(s) 1310, an input/output interface unit(s) 1330, a storage device(s) 1320, and a system bus or network 1340 for facilitating the communication of information among the coupled elements. |
|
http://www.seoguide.org/google-patent-6615209.htm
(12118 words)
|
|
| |
| | What is Copyright |
 | | By the recent amendments in the Copyright Act, a "Computer program" means a set of instructions expressed in words, codes, schemes or any other form, including a machine readable medium, capable of causing a computer to perform a particular task or achieve a particular result. |  | | The amendment, although enlarges the meaning of a computer program, it is still not very clear as to whether it includes both object code and source code. |  | | Copyright subsists in all original published or unpublished literary works; 'literary work' includes computer programs, tables and compilations including computer databases in any tangible form. |
|
http://www.geocities.com/lool95/copyright1.htm
(2563 words)
|
|
| |
| | CSU Libraries: Library Lingo: M |
 | | Machine used to enlarge MICROFORMS through a lens or prism and display them on a screen. |  | | Cataloging information provided by a library that is a member of a network or cooperative program. |  | | A BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD cataloged and/or input by a library other than the LIBRARY OF CONGRESS where the cataloging library is a member of OCLC. |
|
http://lib.colostate.edu/lingo/m.html
(2563 words)
|
|
|