Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Navy E-6B Mercury at the Mojave Air and Space Port. Like the E-3 Sentry Airborne Warning and Control System aircraft, the E-6 is adapted from Boeing's 707-320 airliner. Rolled out at Boeing's Renton Factory in December 1986, [2] the first E-6 made its maiden flight in February 1987, when it was flown to nearby Boeing Field in south Seattle for fitting of mission avionics.
The Time-Triggered Protocol (TTP) is an open computer network protocol for control systems. It was designed as a time-triggered fieldbus for vehicles and industrial applications. [1] and standardized in 2011 as SAE AS6003 (TTP Communication Protocol).
Instruction class - indicates the type of command, e.g., interindustry or proprietary INS 1 Instruction code - indicates the specific command, e.g., "select", "write data" P1-P2 2 Instruction parameters for the command, e.g., offset into file at which to write the data L c: 0, 1 or 3 Encodes the number (N c) of bytes of command data to follow
A printing protocol is a protocol for communication between client devices (computers, mobile phones, tablets, etc.) and printers (or print servers).It allows clients to submit one or more print jobs to the printer or print server, and perform tasks such as querying the status of a printer, obtaining the status of print jobs, or cancelling individual print jobs.
This is a documentation subpage for Template:X86 instruction listings. It may contain usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original template page. Usage
Terrorist Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures used by terrorists, studied by cyber security specialists.TTP ("TOS Takes Parameters"), a filename extension for Atari TOS; Time-Triggered Protocol in networking
These instructions were introduced in the Cyrix 6x86MX and MII processors, and were also present in the MediaGXm and Geode GX1 [53] processors. (In later non-Cyrix processors, all of their opcodes have been used for SSE or SSE2 instructions.) These instructions are integer SIMD instructions acting on 64-bit vectors in MMX registers or memory.
To place the template itself into a category, add the [[Category:Category name]] code inside an <includeonly>...</includeonly> section on the doc subpage. See Wikipedia:Categorization § Template categorization for guidelines. To create an interwiki link for the template itself, go to Wikidata and follow the instructions for adding links to pages.