His character will glitch into the wall and out of the level.
A genre of experimental electronic music of the 1990s, characterized by a deliberate use of sonic artifacts that would normally be viewed as unwanted noise
A glitch is a problem which stops something from working properly or being successful. Manufacturing glitches have limited the factory's output. = hitch, problem. a small fault in a machine or piece of equipment, that stops it working (Probably from glitschen )
An error in the reception of a signal that creates a small error in data without affecting the transmission For example, a glitch might make a printer print a single incorrect character
A small problem or malfunction associated with a computer hardware or software, though the term has evolved to include problems in many circles
1 An electrical spike or pulse of a very short duration 2 A term for program failure or human error
Momentary radio problem that can cause your car or truck to go out of control This is more common with Nitro cars and trucks To prevent your car or truck from going out of control if your radio does glitch, put a return spring on the Servo that controls the throttle and brake The return spring will close down the throttle and apply the brake, if the onboard receiver losses contact with the radio, because of a glitch
Small malfunction in the hardware or software which does not cause an interruption
Full Name: Description: A situation where the outputs of a source device go active while the inputs of a target device are receptive to signal transitions Here, it is possible for the outputs of a source device to go from a high impedance state to High or Low logic level, to cross the switching threshold of the inputs to the target device thereby causing a false transition
A colloquial word to descrive the momentary uncontrolled operation of control surfaces caused by electronic interference or equipment malfunction
A spike caused by the skew of switches or logic Glitches are a troublesome source of error in high-speed D/A convertors and they are most prevalent at the mid scale switching location
An undefined, imprecise power quality term that describes a voltage variation (usually of very short duration) that causes electronic equipment to malfunction
() Probably from Yiddish, from dialectical German glitschig (“slippy”), from glitsch (“slide, glide, slip”) + -ig (“-y”). Related to gleiten (“glide”). Popularized 1960s, by US space program. Attested 1962 by American astronaut John Glenn|John Glenn]], in reference to spikes in electrical current.Moradi, Iman. (2004)