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Screenshot of Device Manager, containing a Qualcomm device booted in the Emergency Download Mode. The Qualcomm Emergency Download mode, commonly known as Qualcomm EDL mode and officially known as Qualcomm HS-USB QD-Loader 9008 [1] is a feature implemented in the boot ROM of a system on a chip by Qualcomm which can be used to recover bricked smartphones.
The Android Debug Bridge (commonly abbreviated as adb) is a programming tool used for the debugging of Android-based devices. The daemon on the Android device connects with the server on the host PC over USB or TCP , which connects to the client that is used by the end-user over TCP.
DAL—Database Abstraction Layer; DAO—Data Access Object; DAO—Data Access Objects; DAO—Disk-At-Once; DAP—Directory Access Protocol; DARPA—Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency; DAS—Direct Attached Storage; DAT—Digital Audio Tape; DB—Database; DSKT—Desktop; DBA—Database Administrator; DBCS—Double Byte Character Set
Adaptive Driving Beams, a system that adapts a car's headlights to avoid glare; Advanced Debugger, a general-purpose debugger for Unix platforms; Advanced Digital Broadcast, supplier of digital TV set-top-boxes for cable, satellite, terrestrial and telecommunications
Programmers usually use such a bridge when a given database lacks a JDBC driver, but is accessible through an ODBC driver. Sun Microsystems included one such bridge in the JVM , but viewed it as a stop-gap measure while few JDBC drivers existed (The built-in JDBC-ODBC bridge was dropped from the JVM in Java 8 [ 31 ] ).
The latest version of MDAC (2.8) consists of several interacting components, all of which are Windows specific except for ODBC (which is available on several platforms). ). MDAC architecture may be viewed as three layers: a programming interface layer, consisting of ADO and ADO.NET, a database access layer developed by database vendors such as Oracle and Microsoft (OLE DB, .NET managed ...
The JDBC type 4 driver, also known as the Direct to Database Pure Java Driver, is a database driver implementation that converts JDBC calls directly into a vendor-specific database protocol. Written completely in Java, type 4 drivers are thus platform independent. They install inside the Java virtual machine of the client. This provides better ...
Commercial and free drivers provide connectivity to most relational-database servers. These drivers fall into one of the following types: Type 1 that calls native code of the locally available ODBC driver. (Note: In JDBC 4.2, JDBC-ODBC bridge has been removed [15]) Type 2 that calls database vendor native library on a client side. This code ...