emulate

listen to the pronunciation of emulate
İngilizce - İngilizce
To feel a rivalry with; to be jealous of, to envy

But the councell then present emulating my successe, would not thinke it fit to spare me fortie men to be hazzarded in those unknowne regions .

of a program or device to imitate another program or device
To attempt to equal or be the same as
To copy or imitate, especially a person
to imitate with intent to equal or surpass
{f} imitate, try to equal or excel, take after, copy
{v} to rival, strive to equal or excel
try to be like
(v ) To imitate a system, primarily by another system such as hardware
  To duplicate the functions of one system with a different system, so that the second system appears to behave like the first system  Note: For example, a computer emulates another, different computer by accepting the same data, executing the same programs, and achieving the same results   Contrast with simulate
To strive to equal or to excel in qualities or actions; to imitate, with a view to equal or to outdo, to vie with; to rival; as, to emulate the good and the great
Striving to excel; ambitious; emulous
To make a computing device "look like" another When you attach to Msstate edu, it is convenient to make your machine emulate a VT100 terminal to Msstate edu, so information is sent using that standard Laser printers from a number of manufacturers emulate Hewlett - Packard printers, so that printing can be carried out using the easily available Hewlett - Packard printer drives
To make a computing device "look like" another When you attach to KSU EDU, it is convenient to make your machine emulate a VT100 terminal That is, your computer looks like a VT100 terminal to KSU EDU, so information is sent using that standard Laser printers from a number of manufacturers emulate Hewlett-Packard printers, so that printing can be carried out using the easily available Hewlett-Packard printer drivers
compete with successfully; approach or reach equality with; "This artists's drawings cannot emulate his water colors"
When a communications program imitates a certain brand of terminal
If you emulate something or someone, you imitate them because you admire them a great deal. Sons are traditionally expected to emulate their fathers. + emulation emu·la·tion a role model worthy of emulation. to do something or behave in the same way as someone else, especially because you admire them = imitate (aemulatus, past participle of aemulari )
strive to equal or match, especially by imitating; "He is emulating the skating skills of his older sister"
compete with successfully; approach or reach equality with; "This artists's drawings cannot emulate his water colors" imitate the function of (another system), as by modifying the hardware or the software strive to equal or match, especially by imitating; "He is emulating the skating skills of his older sister
To simulate the actions of a device or program so that the simulation can actually perform the same functions as the original
imitate the function of (another system), as by modifying the hardware or the software strive to equal or match, especially by imitating; "He is emulating the skating skills of his older sister
(1) To imitate another system (2) A method by which an imitating system can accept the same data, execute the same computer programs and achieve the same results as the original system
imitate the function of (another system), as by modifying the hardware or the software
A program that behaves like another program by virtue of being a precise copy of it
emulation
Running a program or other software designed for a different system
emulation
Jealous rivalry; envy; envious contention

Scarce two gentlemen dwell together in the country , but there is emulation betwixt them and their servants, some quarrel or some grudge betwixt their wives or children .

emulation
The endeavor or desire to equal or excel someone else in qualities or actions
emulation
{n} rivalry, contention, strife, envy
To emulate
envy
To emulate
emule
emulated
past of emulate
emulates
third-person singular of emulate
emulating
present participle of emulate
emulation
To get a clear idea of exactly what Emulation is, you must first have a clear understanding of what the word "emulation" means Quite simply put, emulation is the act of imitating another You could say, for example, that a stunt double is "emulating" the real actor in the movie for certain shots While the double may not actually be the actor, he does mirror him very closely Software looks and acts just like the H card, and can actually convince the receiver that it is indeed a valid H card The important idea, however, is that if DirecTV ever sends down some sort of killer attack, it is just the software on a cheap floppy disk that could be potentially damaged as opposed to an expensive H Card This is why emulation is so attractive to DirecTV hackers
emulation
ambition to equal or excel
emulation
Software that you load on an Apple Mac computer to make it work like a PC operating system so Windows applications can be run
emulation
(1) The use of programming techniques and special machine features to permit a computing system to run programs written for another system
emulation
The use of special control programs to make a new computer system "act" like an older one, thus enabling a business to execute its older programs while software conversion takes place
emulation
Using software which makes a PC behave as though it were a terminal, or which alters the characteristics of a user's terminal to act as a different type of terminal
emulation
A technique that allows a piece of software or hardware to ‘act’ like another in order to cooperate with otherwise incompatible products A very common use of emulation is using a printer with certain types of software
emulation
The endeavor to equal or to excel another in qualities or actions; an assiduous striving to equal or excel another; rivalry
emulation
The process by which a device is built to work like another For example, a chip can be designed to emulate another model and execute software that was written to run in the other design The emulator can be hardware, software or both
emulation
{i} imitation, simulation; imitation of the work environment of another type of system (Computers)
emulation
behavior like another type of entity, usually as in "terminal emulation " Terminal emulation software such as Kermit, ZTerm or ProComm allows a desktop computer to emulate (act like, display data from, interactively log in to) a terminal on a multi-user server-computer in a remote location, over phone lines via modems at both ends, or via hardwiring
emulation
In mainframe computing, software that allows a PC workstation to "imitate" or perform as a mainframe terminal
emulation
A way to allow software to run on a processor it was not designed for When you run an application written for a 68K processor (such as the Quandra) on a Power Mac (which has a PowerPC chip), it runs in emulation mode (which is slower than native code would be) Emulation mode requires an emulator, a piece of software that imitates the native processor For example, the Power Macs have a 68LC040 emulator built into their ROM chips and can come with SoftWindows, an emulator that lets you run PC progams Compare native
emulation
Emulation is said to happen when a system, or a program, performs in the same way as another system A computer can emulate another type of computer in order to run its programs Sometimes terminal emulation is necessary in order for one computer to make a network connection with another
emulation
The process of imitation (simulation) of one computer system by another The imitating program, or device (emulator), accepts the same data, executes the same programs, and achieves the same results
emulation
The imitation of all or part of one device, terminal, or computer by another, so that the imitating device accepts the same data, performs the same functions, & appears to other network devices as if it were the imitated devices
emulation
The imitation of a computer system, performed by a combination of hardware and software, that allows programs to run between incompatible systems
emulation
The imitation, performed by a combination of hardware and software, of all or part of one device, terminal, or computer by another, so that the imitating device accepts the same data, performs the same functions, and appears to other network devices as if it were the imitated device Emulation allows programs to run between incompatible systems
emulation
Hardware or software, or a combination of the two, that behaves like another device or program, like PCs emulating dumb terminals
emulation
A means of overcoming technological obsolescence of hardware and software by developing techniques for imitating obsolete systems on future generations of computers
emulation
Refers to the ability of a program or device to imitate another program or device Many printers, for example, are designed to emulate Hewlett-Packard LaserJet printers because so much software is written for HP printers By emulating an HP printer, a printer can work with any software written for a real HP printer Emulation tricks the software into believing that a device is really some other device Communications software packages often include terminal emulation drivers This enables your PC to emulate a particular type of terminal so that you can log on to a mainframe It is also possible for a computer to emulate another type of computer For example, there are programs that enable an Apple Macintosh to emulate a PC
emulation
The imitation by one computing device or program of another device or program This allows the client and the server to conduct transparent access to networked resources VT100 is one of the most common telecommunications emulations
emulation
A process by which a computer imitates the actions of another computer, so that the imitating system accepts the same data and executes the same computer programs as the imitated system
emulation
(computer science) technique of one machine obtaining the same results as another
emulation
effort to equal or surpass another
emulation
Recreation of a system that will behave just like an original computing environment based on detailed specifications of that environment [Arms, 2001, p 260 ]
emulation
A DIGITAL PRESERVATION STRATEGY whereby digital materials are stored in their original format as a bit stream and software and hardware emulators are employed to mimic the behaviour of obsolete hardware platforms and emulate the relevant operating system to allow for access
emulation
- The imitation of a computer system, performed by a combination of hardware and software, that allows programs to run between incompatible systems
emulation
A network activity in which a computer acts as if it is another kind of computer or terminal An example is when a Macintosh user opens a remote terminal session to a VAX, it may run a program that emulates a DEC VT240 terminal
emulation
Replication of a computing system to process programs and data from an early system that is no longer available
emulation
effort to equal or surpass another (computer science) technique of one machine obtaining the same results as another ambition to equal or excel
emulate