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gen. |
registration; inscription |
comp., MS |
enroll (To register for a class or academic program); subscribe (To add a newsgroup to the Windows Mail folder list); subscription (A view that a mobile device user has selected to be available on his or her mobile device); burn (To copy files to a recordable CD); recording (A feature that allows presenters to capture and publish the audio and visual components of a meeting for later viewing); record (A group of related fields (columns) of information treated as a unit and arranged in a horizontal line in a table or spreadsheet); write (A transfer of information to a storage device, such as a disk, or to an output device, such as the monitor or printer. For example, a disk write means that information is transferred from memory to storage on disk) |
ed. |
matriculation |
environ. |
incorporation No definition needed |
fin. |
subscription; private subscription |
IT, dat.proc. |
frame |
IT, tech. |
writing |
law, cultur., industr. |
fixation |
stat. |
notation |
work.fl. |
record |
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comp., MS |
CNAME record (A type of resource record in the Domain Name System that associates a computer's true (canonical) name with any alias names also used by the computer. Some domain registrars use CNAME records to redirect or redelegate domain names) |
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comp., MS |
SRV record (A category of data in the Internet Domain Name System that specifies information on available services. The SRV record is used to locate domain controllers for Active Directory) |
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comp., MS |
A record (A type of resource record in the Domain Name System that associates a specific IP address with a domain name. This is the record that contains the information that connects your domain name to your actual Web site content when people type your domain name into a browser) |
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comp., MS |
MX record (A type of resource record in the Domain Name System (DNS) specifying how Internet e-mail should be routed using the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP). Each MX record contains a preference and a host name, so that the collection of MX records for a given domain name point to the servers that should receive e-mail for that domain, and their priority relative to each other) |