A certification by a trusted third party specifying that a particular message existed at a specific time and date. In a digital context, trusted third parties generate a trusted timestamp for a particular message by having a timestamping service append a time value to a message and then digitally signing the result. See also digital signature, service
A tag that enables a Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI) sequencer to replay recorded MIDI data at the proper moment See also Musical Instrument Digital Interface
The addition of the time information -in the relevant field- in the target report (plot or track) In the ASTERIX the time information is coded in two octets with Least Significant Bit (LSB) equal to 1/128 seconds
Part of the order-routing process in which the time of day is stamped on an order An order is time-stamped when it is (1) received on the trading floor, and (2) completed
A field that indicates the amount of time the packet has spent waiting in queues during the transmission between its source and destination nodes Used to control the delay experienced by the packet
A timestamp is a time value expressed in milliseconds It is typically the time since the last server reset Timestamp values wrap around (after about 49 7 days) The server, given its current time is represented by timestamp T, always interprets timestamps from clients by treating half of the timestamp space as being earlier in time than T and half of the timestamp space as being later in time than T One timestamp value, represented by the constant CurrentTime, is never generated by the server This value is reserved for use in requests to represent the current server time
A value in the "seconds since the epoch" format used by Unix and POSIX systems Used for the @command{gawk} functions mktime, strftime, and systime See also "Epoch" and "UTC "
Field in certain Fast Packet formats that indicates the amount of time the packet has spent waiting in queues during the transmission between its source and destination nodes Used to control the delay experienced by the packet
The UNIX filesystem stores the times that each file was last modified, accessed, or had a change to its inode These times - especially the modification time - are often called timestamps See also article 21 13
When the instrumented IRIX kernel is run with the accompanying real-time monitoring daemon, certain logged events are tagged with a high-resolution timestamp The events are displayed in the View Graph along a timeline showing when they occurred based on their timestamps
A value in the "seconds since the epoch" format used by Unix and POSIX systems Used for the gawk functions mktime, strftime, and systime See also "Epoch" and "UTC "
A time value, expressed in milliseconds, typically since the last server reset Timestamp values wrap around (after about 49 7 days) The server, given its current time is represented by timestamp T, always interprets timestamps from clients by treating half of the timestamp space as being earlier in time than T, and half of the timestamp space as being later in time than T One timestamp value, represented by the constant CurrentTime is never generated by the server This value is reserved for use in requests to represent the current server time
A time mark or notation that indicates the date and the time of an action, and the identity of the person or device that sent or received the time stamp