Graffiti is a the character recognition software used by PalmOS that enables users to input data into Palm devices via the touch screen using a stylus It uses symbols that often resemble capital letters
Not what you see all over Los Angeles or New York It's a fairly easy-to-use character-recognition application where users memorize a few specific short-hand commands to enter alphanumeric data
Graffiti is a the character recognition software utilized by PalmOS that enables users to quickly input data into the Palm units Graffiti is closely related to the ASCII character set which allows users to learn the input system relatively easily " --NearlyMobile
words or drawings which are written, painted or scratched on public buildings and other public places These designs and inscriptions are generally regarded as unsightly amd defacing the walls, fences, vehicles They are very costly to remove
Graffiti is words or pictures that are written or drawn in public places, for example on walls or posters. There's no vandalism, no graffiti, no rubbish left lying about. rude, humorous, or political writing and pictures on the walls of buildings, trains etc (graffiare ). Form of visual communication, usually illegal, involving the unauthorized marking of public space by an individual or group. Technically the term applies to designs scratched through a layer of paint or plaster, but its meaning has been extended to other markings. Graffiti is widely considered a form of antisocial behaviour performed in order to gain attention or simply for thrills. But it also can be understood as an expressive art form. Derived from the Italian word graffio ("scratch"), graffiti ("incised inscriptions," plural but often used as singular) has a long history. It has been found in ancient Roman ruins, in the remains of the Mayan city of Tikal in Central America, on rocks in Spain dating to the 16th century, and in medieval English churches. During the 20th century, graffiti in the U.S. and Europe was closely associated with gangs. Graffiti was particularly prominent in major urban centres throughout the world; common targets were subways, billboards, and walls. In the 1990s there emerged a new form of graffiti, known as "tagging," which entailed the repeated use of a single symbol or series of symbols to mark territory