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  2. End-of-file - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End-of-file

    In DOS and Windows (and in CP/M and many DEC operating systems such as the PDP-6 monitor, [3] RT-11, VMS or TOPS-10 [4]), reading from the terminal will never produce an EOF. Instead, programs recognize that the source is a terminal (or other "character device") and interpret a given reserved character or sequence as an end-of-file indicator ...

  3. Abort, Retry, Fail? - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abort,_Retry,_Fail?

    In CP/M, attempting to read a floppy disk drive with the door open would hang until a disk was inserted and the disk drive door was closed (very early disk hardware did not send any kind of signal until a disk was spinning, and a timeout to detect the lack of signal required too much code on these tiny systems). Many users of CP/M became ...

  4. Windows File Recovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_File_Recovery

    Windows File Recovery is a command-line software utility from Microsoft to recover deleted files. [1] [2] It is freely available for Windows 10 version 2004 (May 2020 Update) and later from the Microsoft Store. [3] Windows File Recovery can recover files from a local hard disk drive (HDD), USB flash drive, or memory card such as an SD card.

  5. Recovery procedure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recovery_procedure

    In telecommunications, a recovery procedure is a process that attempts to bring a system back to a normal operating state. Examples: Examples: The actions necessary to restore an automated information system 's data files and computational capability after a system failure.

  6. File locking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_locking

    File locking is a mechanism that restricts access to a computer file, or to a region of a file, by allowing only one user or process to modify or delete it at a specific time, and preventing reading of the file while it's being modified or deleted.

  7. Error recovery control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Error_recovery_control

    Modern hard drives feature an ability to recover from some read/write errors by internally remapping sectors and performing other forms of self-test and recovery. The process for this can sometimes take several seconds or (under heavy usage) minutes, during which time the drive is unresponsive.

  8. Reed–Solomon error correction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed–Solomon_error...

    Deep-space concatenated coding system. [8] Notation: RS(255, 223) + CC ("constraint length" = 7, code rate = 1/2). One significant application of Reed–Solomon coding was to encode the digital pictures sent back by the Voyager program.

  9. Service recovery paradox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_recovery_paradox

    Before the term Service Recovery Paradox was first used, the concept of service recovery was described by Hart, Hessket and Sasser in the following terms: [6] "A good recovery can turn angry, frustrated customers into loyal ones. It can, in fact, create more goodwill than if things had gone smoothly in the first place”.