Sanal bellek çoklu görev çekirdekleri için geliştirilmiş bir bellek yönetim tekniğidir. - Virtual memory is a memory management technique developed for multitasking kernels.
Tom çoklu görev yapamaz. - Tom is not capable of multitasking.
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multi tasking teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
In computing, the concurrent execution of multiple tasks by a single computer processor
Multi-tasking refers to the concurrent processing of programs in the CPU By rationing the available processor power among each running job, the system seems to be doing more than one job at a time This can occur if the internal memory is large enough to run more than one program, and results in faster application processing and enhanced system efficiency
Multi-tasking is a situation in which a computer or person does more than one thing at the same time. The big advantage of multi-tasking is that all equipment is used most of the time
A term that describes an environment in which a single computer is used to share time with 2 or more tasks Contrast with multi-user For more information and implementation details see articles 1, and 2
The ability of Windows to run several programs at once The trick is that Windows switches very rapidly between the tasks, giving you the impression that they are running in parallel My Computer Icon normally in the top left of the screen on a PC running Windows 95 It contains an overview of your PC If you double-click on it you'll see the peripherals linked to your PC
also known as pre-emptive multi-tasking The operating system shares the computer resources between two or more applications so that the applications appear to be running simultaneously
Two or more programs actually run at the same time Windows95 and OS/2 support multi-tasking Windows 3 1 supports "task switching" but not multi-tasking Extended memory is divided up into "virtual machines" that share time on a single processor With multi-tasking, a computer could be receiving communication via modem in the background while running Excel in the foreground
Ability to initiate one task while another is already taking place Ex receive faxes while printing or copying and program a copy job during a print job or fax transmission
The ability to run more than one program at the same time There are different types of multitasking Cooperative multitasking requires a program to be written to allow other programs to access the system In preemptive multitasking, the system can suspend any program to allow other programs access Preemptive multitasking provides better performance, as programs can switch with less overhead The Macintosh and Windows 3 1 use cooperative multitasking Windows 95 and Unix use preemptive multitasking
The ability of a CPU to perform more than one operation at the same time; Windows and Macintosh computers are multitasking in that each program that is running uses the CPU only for as long as needed and then control switches to the next task
(1) (n ) Enabling more than one user to access the same program at the same time (2) (adj ) Characteristic of the concurrent execution of two or more tasks by a computer
In computer programming, a mode of operation that allows multiple tasks to run concurrently or the interleaved execution of two or more tasks (a unit of programming controlled by the operating system)
Working at a computer with multiple programs available at the same time Running multiple application concurrently on the computer allows the user to quickly jump from one program to another without closing and opening applications
The capability of a computer with a single CPU to simulate the processing of more than one task at a time Multitasking is effective when one (or more) of the applications spends most of its time in an idle state, waiting for a user-initiated event such as a keystroke or mouse click
Using your computer to run two or more programmes at once You might, for example, open two documents simultaneously to edit between them and need a spreadsheet open to refer to Macs have had little trouble multitasking, though it was not until Windows ë95 that PCÃs became happy with the chore
1 adj The ability to download software from the Internet while running productivity applications 2 n A multiple process Operating System scheme which relies on computer hardware to efficiently and safely share computer resources between applications See Task Switching
Mode of computer operation in which the computer works on multiple tasks at the same time. A task is a computer program (or part of a program) that can be run as a separate entity. On a single-processor system, the CPU can perform preemptive (also called time slicing or time sharing) multitasking, where it executes part of one program, then switches to another program, and then returns to the first one. On multiprocessing systems, each processor can handle a separate task
- The ability of an operating system to run more than one program, or task, at a time A cooperative multitasking OS, like Windows 95/98, requires one application to voluntarily free up resources upon request so another application can use it A preemptive multitasking OS, such as GNU/Linux, Windows NT/2000 or OS/2, frees up resources when ordered to by the operating system, on a time-slice basis, or a priority basis, so that one application is unable to hog resources when they are needed by another program (Also, see Multithreading and Time-sharing )
Some OSes have built into them the ability to do several things at once This is called multitasking, and has been in use since the late sixties / early seventies Since this ability is built into the software, the overall system will be slower running two things at once than it will be running just one thing A system may have more than one processor built into it though, and such a system will be capable of running multiple things at once with less of a performance hit
Running several programs at once -- Linux excels at this The kernel switches between processes so quickly that they appear to be running simultaneously
The technique of using several applications programs (tasks) in a computer system or on several terminals in a network at the same time Multitasking can simultaneously work with several programs or interrelated tasks that share memories, codes, buffers, and files
The ability of an operating system to run several programs simultaneously and independent from another If a computer only has one CPU, this is achieved by distributing the computing power by a so-called scheduler, running each program for a small amount of time, calculated by special criterions UNIX to some extent Win offer a good multitasking See multithreading also
(n ) Executing many processes on a single processor This is usually done by time-slicing the execution of individual processes and performing a context switch each time a process is swapped in or out, but is supported by special-purpose hardware in some computers Most operating systems support multitasking, but it can be costly if the need to switch large caches or execution pipelines makes context switching expensive in time