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  2. Forensic Science Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forensic_Science_Service

    The FSS suffered damage to its reputation following the failure to recover blood stains from a shoe in the murder of Damilola Taylor. [6] Further damage occurred when the FSS failed to use the most up-to-date techniques for extracting DNA samples in cases between 2000 and 2005. [ 7 ]

  3. Flats Sequencing System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flats_Sequencing_System

    Flats Sequencing System (FSS) is an automated system used by the US Postal Service. It uses a dual pass sort technique to sort flats all the way to delivery sequence order. Prior to the deployment of FSS machines, flats were machine sorted to the route level only.

  4. Fail-fast system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fail-fast_system

    Given an initial state in a state machine, a fail-fast system will check such a state and fail fast. Given a state-change in a state machine, the fail-fast system will halt the machine if the state-change is forbidden. It could be the case that the forbidden state-change is due to a wrong external input.

  5. Veritas File System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veritas_File_System

    The Cluster File System provides cache coherency and POSIX compliance across nodes, so that data changes are atomically seen by all cluster nodes simultaneously. Because Cluster File System shares the same binaries and same on-disk layout as single instance VxFS, moving between cluster and single instance mode is straightforward.

  6. File system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_system

    The file system of the Michigan Terminal System (MTS) is interesting because: (i) it provides "line files" where record lengths and line numbers are associated as metadata with each record in the file, lines can be added, replaced, updated with the same or different length records, and deleted anywhere in the file without the need to read and ...

  7. YAFFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YAFFS

    YAFFS (Yet Another Flash File System) is a file system designed and written by Charles Manning for the company Aleph One. YAFFS1 was the first version of this file system and was designed for the then-current NAND chips with 512 byte page size (+ 16 byte spare (OOB; Out-Of-Band) area). Work started in 2002, and it was first released later that ...

  8. Coda (file system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coda_(file_system)

    Well defined semantics of sharing, even in the presence of network failure Coda uses a local cache to provide access to server data when the network connection is lost. During normal operation, a user reads and writes to the file system normally, while the client fetches, or "hoards", all of the data the user has listed as important in the ...

  9. F2FS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F2FS

    F2FS (Flash-Friendly File System) is a flash file system initially developed by Samsung Electronics for the Linux kernel. [ 5 ] The motive for F2FS was to build a file system that, from the start, takes into account the characteristics of NAND flash memory -based storage devices (such as solid-state disks , eMMC , and SD cards), which are ...