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HASP bypassed most operating system services with code specially tailored for efficiency. HASP operated as a single operating system task [1] and used cooperative multitasking internally to run processors to perform tasks such as running card readers, printers, and punches, managing the spool files, communicating with the system operator, and driving multiple communication lines for remote job ...
The Sentinel A4 is a complete redesign of the sensor that uses digital processing and solid-state antenna modules based on gallium nitride (GAN) transmitters. The scalable modular architecture is shared with the long-range AN/TPY-4 radar, which has 1000 individually controlled elements and uses GPU computing for signal processing.
In 2008, Hard Disk Sentinel DOS version was released in different formats on bootable pen drive, CD, floppy. Usable when no operating system installed (or if the system is not bootable otherwise) to detect and display temperature, health status of IDE, SATA hard disk drives and with limited AHCI controller support.
HASP may refer to: Homeowners Affordability and Stability Plan, a U.S. program announced on February 18, 2009, by U.S. President Barack Obama; Houston Automatic Spooling Priority, a system program for IBM System/360 and IBM System/370 mainframe computer systems; Hasp key, a Hardware Against Software Piracy copy-protection dongle
Sentinel, a paradigm role in Final Fantasy XIII; Sentinel, a character class in the Mass Effect universe; Alan Scott, the original Green Lantern, who was called "sentinel" at one point; Sentinels, a faction in Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare; Sentinel, a computer in the TV show Transformers: Beast Wars
An early hard disk monitoring technology was introduced by IBM in 1992 in its IBM 9337 Disk Arrays for AS/400 servers using IBM 0662 SCSI-2 disk drives. [11] Later it was named Predictive Failure Analysis (PFA) technology.
There are potential weaknesses in the implementation of the protocol between the dongle and the copy-controlled software. For example, a simple implementation might define a function to check for the dongle's presence, returning "true" or "false" accordingly, but the dongle requirement can be easily circumvented by modifying the software to always answer "true".
SafeNet, Inc. was an information security company based in Belcamp, Maryland, United States, which was acquired in August 2014 by the French security company Gemalto. ...