| stream | n A kind of sheet that implements the stream protocol (such as maintaining a text cursor) | en |
| stream | Data transmitted across a network and any properties associated with the data Streaming data allows the player to begin rendering the data immediately instead of waiting for the entire file to be downloaded | en |
| stream | Any data transmission that occurs in a continuous flow Streaming audio and video files allow you to display or play the beginning before all the data has been transferred | en |
| stream | On CRAY T3E systems, a stream is a series of data items between memory and the functional units of a PE Similar to a pipeline on Cray PVP systems, a stream feeds data to the functional units in optimal fashion For more information on streams, see Section 1 2 1 For information on how to make use of streams in your program, see Chapter 4 | en |
| stream | Any river, creek, slough, or natural watercourse in which water usually flows in a defined bed or channel It is not essential that the flowing be uniform or uninterrupted The fact that some part of the bed or channel has been dredged or improved does not prevent the watercourse from being a stream | en |
| stream | a free-flowing body of water from the outlet of great pond or the confluence of two (2) perennial streams as depicted on the most recent edition of a United States Geological Survey 7 5 minute series topographic map, or if not available, a 15 minute series topographic map to the point where the body of water becomes a river | en |
| stream | A long narrow channel of water that flows as a function of gravity and elevation across the Earth's surface Many streams empty into lakes, seas or oceans | en |
| stream | A body of water found on the Earth's surface and confined to a narrow topographic depression, down which it flows and transports rock particles, sediment, and dissolved particles Rivers, creeks, brooks, and runs are all streams | en |
| stream | a general term for a body of flowing water; natural water course containing water at least part of the year In hydrology, it is generally applied to the water flowing in a natural channel as distinct from a canal | en |
| stream | A natural body of flowing water that is a complex ecosystem in which biological, chemical, or physical changes may affect other characteristics A stream begins at its headwaters and gathers water from runoff, rain, snowmelt, or from underground springs Streams hold great importance regardless of size or flow They provide water supplies, a variety of aesthetic values, and are also important wildlife habitats | en |
| stream | A general term for a body of flowing water In hydrology the term is generally applied to the water flowing in a natural channel as distinct from a canal More generally as in the term stream gaging, it is applied to the water flowing in any channel, natural or artificial Streams in natural | en |
| stream | A sequence of data bytes with sequencing and flow control The TCP/IP stream protocol is TCP (Isn't there a System V stream concept as well as the network protocol? Does Linux implement it?) | en |
| stream | (1) A contiguous group of data elements being transmitted, or intended for transmission, in character or binary-digit form, using a defined format (2) A file access object that allows access to an ordered sequence of characters, as described by the ISO C standard A stream provides the additional services of user-selectable buffering and formatted input and output (3) In text processing, treating the entire text as a single string, even when the string is broken into lines for viewing purposes | en |
| stream | A "stream" is a sequence of data APGen allows developers to use Output streams and Log streams Both of these streams implement the COM IStream interface | en |
| stream | A FIFO (first in first out) buffer When a program asks for input from a user, the user can write a few lines of data When we call a getline function in the program, the first line we read is the first line written by the user (not the latest) It's like a line at the post office | en |
| stream | A persistent Java object which permits the reading or writing of multiple sequential values Represents a connection to another (potentially non-Java) entity Used for input or output | en |
| stream | A thin connected passing of a liquid through a lighter gas (e.g. air) | en |
| stream | A small river; a large creek; a body of moving water confined by banks | en |
| stream | A source or repository of data that can be read or written only sequentially | en |
| stream | Umbrella term for all moving waters | en |
| stream | To flow in a continuous or steady manner, like a liquid | en |
| stream | To push continuous data (e.g. music) from a server to a client computer while it is being used (played) on the client | en |
| stream | Any steady flow or succession of material, such as water, air, radio signal or words | en |
| stream | a general term for a body of flowing water | en |
| stream | rain heavily; "Put on your rain coat-- it's pouring outside!" | en |
| stream | A body of running water | en |
| stream | By MDNR definition; "a river, creek, or surface waterway that may or may not be defined by Act 40, P A Of 1956: has definite banks, a bed, and visible evidence of continued flow or continued occurrence of water, including the connecting water of the Great Lakes" | en |
| stream | to extend, wave or float outward, as if in the wind; "their manes streamed like stiff black pennants in the wind | en |
| stream | Any body of running water moving under gravity flow through clearly defined natural channels to progressively lower levels | en |
| stream | An object which provides sequential read and/or write access to the contents of a collection of file | en |
| stream | A kind of sheet that implements the stream protocol (such as maintaining a text cursor) | en |
| stream | Any body of running water moving under gravity flow through clearly defined natural channels | en |
| stream | Current; drift; tendency; series of tending or moving causes; as, the stream of opinions or manners | en |
| stream | To issue or flow in a stream; to flow freely or in a current, as a fluid or whatever is likened to fluids; as, tears streamed from her eyes | en |
| stream | To pour out, or emit, a stream or streams | en |
| stream | A continued current or course; as, a stream of weather | en |
| stream | Anything issuing or moving with continued succession of parts; as, a stream of words; a stream of sand | en |
| stream | A current of water or other fluid; a liquid flowing continuously in a line or course, either on the earth, as a river, brook, etc | en |
| stream | A beam or ray of light | en |
| stream | dominant course (suggestive of running water) of successive events or ideas; "two streams of development run through American history"; "stream of consciousness"; "the flow of thought"; "the current of history" | en |
| stream | To unfurl | en |
| stream | a natural body of running water flowing on or under the earth something that resembles a flowing stream in moving continuously; "a stream of people emptied from the terminal"; "the museum had planned carefully for the flow of visitors" | en |
| stream | To extend; to stretch out with a wavy motion; to float in the wind; as, a flag streams in the wind | en |
| stream | move in large numbers; "people were pouring out of the theater"; "beggars pullulated in the plaza" | en |
| stream | exude profusely; "She was streaming with sweat"; "His nose streamed blood" | en |
| stream | flow freely and abundantly; "Tears streamed down her face" | en |
| stream | To mark with colors or embroidery in long tracts | en |
| stream | To send forth in a current or stream; to cause to flow; to pour; as, his eyes streamed tears | en |
| stream | or from a vessel, reservoir, or fountain; specifically, any course of running water; as, many streams are blended in the Mississippi; gas and steam came from the earth in streams; a stream of molten lead from a furnace; a stream of lava from a volcano | en |
| stream | To issue in a stream of light; to radiate | en |
| stream | a natural body of running water flowing on or under the earth | en |
| stream | If something such as a new factory or a new system comes on stream or is brought on stream, it begins to operate or becomes available. As new mines come on stream, Chile's share of world copper output will increase sharply see also jet stream. stream channel Gulf Stream jet stream stream of consciousness | en |
| stream | When light streams into or out of a place, it shines strongly into or out of it. Sunlight was streaming into the courtyard | en |
| stream | a steady flow (usually from natural causes); "the raft floated downstream on the current"; "he felt a stream of air" | en |
| stream | flow; pour out from; arrive in large numbers; flow freely; blow, wave; emit beams of light fiil | en |
| stream | to extend, wave or float outward, as if in the wind; "their manes streamed like stiff black pennants in the wind" | en |
| stream | something that resembles a flowing stream in moving continuously; "a stream of people emptied from the terminal"; "the museum had planned carefully for the flow of visitors" | en |
| stream | If people or vehicles stream somewhere, they move there quickly and in large numbers. Refugees have been streaming into Travnik for months | en |
| stream | the act of flowing or streaming; continuous progression | en |
| stream | A stream of smoke, air, or liquid is a narrow moving mass of it. He breathed out a stream of cigarette smoke Add the oil in a slow, steady stream | en |
| stream | brook, creek, river; flow of water or other liquid; constant outpouring isim | en |
| stream | If your eyes are streaming, liquid is coming from them, for example because you have a cold. You can also say that your nose is streaming. Her eyes were streaming now from the wind A cold usually starts with a streaming nose and dry throat | en |
| stream | A stream of vehicles or people is a long moving line of them. There was a stream of traffic behind him | en |
| stream | A stream is a small narrow river. There was a small stream at the end of the garden. a mountain stream | en |
| stream | A stream of things is a large number of them occurring one after another. We had a constant stream of visitors | en |
| stream | If a liquid streams somewhere, it flows or comes out in large amounts. Tears streamed down their faces She came in, rain streaming from her clothes and hair | en |
| A stream | prill | en |
| A stream | nullah | en |
| A stream | born | en |
| Streams | str | en |
| streamed | past of stream | en |
| streaming | A technique for transferring data so that it can be processed as a steady and continuous stream Streaming technologies are becoming increasingly important with the growth the use of multimedia files on the Internet With streaming, the clients browser or plug-in can start displaying the data before the entire file has been transmitted | en |
| streaming | An alternative to downloading large files such as audio and video Streaming allows users to commence playback whilst the remaining file is downloading in the background | en |
| streaming | "Streaming" is the ability to listen to music while it is being sent to you over the Internet With streaming, you can hear the music much sooner than without streaming This is because you hear music after only the first part of the file has reached you We call this Progressive Rendering of Music This unique LiveUpdate technology for streaming MIDI music is patent-pending For more information, see our "Streaming" page | en |
| streaming | Streaming audio or video is an audio or video is a technique which allows an audio signal to be listened to and a video signal to viewed while it is being transmitted from a Web site This contrasts with the technique of transfering the whole file before it starts playing back to you Streaming requires that the signal is transmitted as fast as you view it To achieve this the quality is sacrificed when a slow connection is being used | en |
| streaming | A technology that allows a sound or video file on a Web page to begin playing as soon as the beginning of the file arrives Without streaming, the entire file (file sizes are very large for sound and video) must be downloaded before anything can happen As becomes more widely used, sound and video will become much more commonplace on Web pages | en |
| streaming | A technology that allows a sound or video file on a Web to begin playing as the file is downloading Without streaming, the entire file must finish downloading before the sound or video can be played | en |
| streaming | Technology that permits continuous audio and video delivered to you computer from a remote Web site It requires a high degree of compression to transfer audio or video (or both) at current modem speeds and still retain sound and picture quality | en |
| streaming | Applications that can play audio or video content while they're still downloading | en |
| streaming | the transmission of digital audio or video, or the listening and viewing of such data without first storing it | en |
| streaming | A technology for delivering audio or video files so that they can be heard or seen whilst downloading, without having to wait for the complete file | en |
| streaming | that streams | en |
| streaming | This is a technique for transferring data such that it can be processed as a steady and continuous stream | en |
| streaming | One-way (either point-to-point or broadcast to multiple receivers) transmission of video and audio contents over the Internet or advanced wideband wireless networks | en |
| streaming | A low-bit-rate encoding format intended for use over networks and the Internet Streaming files match the encoded bit rate to the connection speed of the user, so the remote viewer can play audio or video with minimal stoppage without first downloading the entire video file | en |
| streaming | Streaming is a technology that allows you to play a video or audio file as it downloads to your computer | en |
| streaming | exuding a bodily fluid in profuse amounts; "his streaming face"; "her streaming eyes" | en |
| streaming | the circulation of cytoplasm within a cell | en |
| streaming | Most data transfered from websites uses the HTTP protocol which involves breaking the info down into a small chunks called packets If you want to send video or audio by this method, effectively you've got to download the whole file which may be massive first before using Streaming media allows you to watch a file as it downloads You usually need a plug in to see these files You may also need a special server to provide this service Examples of system include real video and real audio (from Real Networks) and quicktime (from Apple) | en |
| streaming | (of liquids) moving freely; "a flowing brook" | en |
| streaming | Streaming is a method of transmitting data from the Internet directly to a user's computer screen without the need to download it. web sites that feature streaming media. see also stream. when you play sound or video on your computer while it is being broadcast over the Internet, instead of downloading it and saving it into a file so that you can listen to it or watch it later. Method of transmitting a media file in a continuous stream of data that can be processed by the receiving computer before the entire file has been completely sent. Streaming, which typically uses data compression, is especially effective for downloading large multimedia files from the Internet; it permits, for example, a video clip to begin playing on a user's computer as soon as it begins to be downloaded from a Web site. Even with improved modems and connection speeds, downloading and playing large audio and video files without the use of streaming techniques still takes an inconveniently long time. To accept streaming data, the receiving computer needs to be running a player, a program that decompresses the incoming data and sends the resulting signals to the display and speakers. The audio and video files may be prerecorded, but streaming can also accommodate a live feed over the Internet | en |
| streaming | The act or operation of that which streams; the act of that which sends forth, or which runs in, streams | en |
| streaming | exuding a bodily fluid in profuse amounts; "his streaming face"; "her streaming eyes | en |
| streaming | The reduction of stream tin; also, the search for stream tin | en |
| streaming | Sending forth streams | en |
| streaming | A technology for transmitting electronic information in a stream, rather than in a complete package This technology has enabled more accessible Internet audio and video Audio, and especially video, files tend to be large, which makes downloading and accessing them as a complete package a very time-consuming operation With streaming technology, however, the files can be downloaded and accessed at the same time, which makes using them much faster and easier Streaming is the technology behind RealPlayer and TiVO Back to top | en |
| streaming | moving smoothly and continuously; "crowds flowing through the canyons of the streets"; "fan streaming into the concert hall" | en |
| streaming | Streaming allows audio and video to be played across the Internet in real time With most audio and video on the Internet you must wait until the whole media file has been downloaded to you computer before it can start to play - streaming media will start running immediately | en |
| streaming | A method for transferring data continuously Streaming allows you to display the data on your browser before the entire file is transmitted For streaming to work, the data must be received by your browser and sent to an application that will process the data and convert it to audio or video | en |
| streaming | A stream of data is transmitted via the Internet The sent data is not stored on your computer - it is played back as the stream hits your computer The quality of a stream is dependent on the bandwith with which you are connected to the Internet The widest spread streaming software for video and audio together is the RealPlayer - a so called "sure" stream on the RealPlayer receives 34kbps for both the pictures AND the tone (that is nothing - and that is why the quality is lousy) SHOUTcast MP3 streaming is just audio - but here you can receive streams up to 128kbps - if you are sitting directly inside the Internet you will be able to receive this quality without gaps Wait until the bandwith gets broader and the streams are going to look like television ! | en |
| streaming | Video or audio files sent in compressed form over the Internet and displayed on the viewer's screen as it arrives | en |
| streaming | Technology that permits continuous audio and video to be delivered to your computer from a remote web site A high degree of compression is required to transfer audio and/or video at normal modem speeds while retaining sound and picture quality | en |
| streaming | A process for playing audio or video files over the Internet Streamed files can begin to play while the file is in the process of downloading, eliminating the wait associated with other forms of audio/video playback in which the entire file must be received prior to playing | en |
| streaming | Streaming is the transfer of data in a continuous stream over the Web (usually audio or video) that allows the user to play it as it arrives However, to receive this content, you must have the right plug-in for the application, such as RealPlayer, QuickTime viewer, etc Back to Top T | en |
| streaming | A technique for transferring data such that it can be processed as a steady and continuous stream Streaming technologies are becoming increasingly important with the growth of the Internet because most users do not have fast enough access to download large multimedia files quickly With streaming, the client browser or plug-in can start displaying the data before the entire file has been transmitted | en |
| streaming | n 1 On the Internet, the process of delivering information, especially multimedia sound or video, in a steady flow that the recipient can access as the file is being transmitted 2 In magnetic tape storage devices, a lowcost technique to control the motion of the tape by removing tape buffers Although streaming tape compromises start/stop performance, it achieves highly reliable storage and retrieval of data, and is useful when a steady supply of data is required by a particular application or computer | en |
| streams | third-person singular of stream | en |
| streams | Controlled flows of data from one source to another | en |
| streams | A stream is a special kind of sheet that implements the stream protocol; streams include additional state such as the current text cursor (which is some point in the drawing plane) | en |
| streams | A kernel mechanism specified by AT&T that supports the implementation of device drivers and networking protocol stacks See also STREAMS framework | en |
| streams | A kernel subsystem used to build a stream, which is a modular, full-duplex data path between a device and a user process | en |
| streams | plural of stream | en |