0%

Words containing 10

3 letter words containing 10

  • 610 — (communications)   The standard type of two-wire wall socket and plug used for telephones in Australia.
  • g10 — Group of Ten
  • n10 — Original codename of the Intel i860 microprocessor.

4 letter words containing 10

  • 4510 — (processor)   A 65CE02 with two 6526 IO controllers. Used in the Commodore 65.
  • 6510 — (processor)   A successor to the 6502. The 6510 was used in the Commodore 64C. Successors included the 8502 used in the Commodore 128 line.
  • c-10 — (language)   An improved version of COLINGO.
  • l10n — localisation
  • v.10 — (communications, standard)   An ITU-T recommendation on electrical characteristics for unbalanced double-current interchange circuits operating at data signalling rates nominally up to 100 kbps. This recommendation is also included but not published in ITU-T X series under alias number X.26. The circuit defined in this standard is used in other serial line standards such as EIA-232 and EIA-423, that implement single ended communication.

5 letter words containing 10

  • id10t — (abuse)   /I D ten T/ A grade of user problem somewhere between PEBCAK and UBD. Considered friendlier than saying, "You called me down here to exit a modal dialog box for you?"
  • x3t10 — (body)   The ATA standards body.

6 letter words containing 10

  • arm610 — (processor)   A 32-bit RISC microprocessor based on the ARM6 processor core designed by Advanced RISC Machines Ltd. The ARM610 is the successor to the ARM3 processor and is produced by VLSI Technology Inc. It consumes 500mW at 33MHz with a 5V supply.
  • arm710 — (processor)   A 32-bit RISC microprocessor based on the ARM7 processor core designed by Advanced RISC Machines Ltd. The A710 is the successor to the ARM610 processor. It was released in July 1994 by VLSI Technology Inc. The ARM710 can run at 40MHz (fastest sample 55MHz) dissipating 500mW with a 5V supply or 25MHz with 3.3V supply. It has an 8 kilobyte on-chip cache, memory management unit and write buffer. The ARM700 and ARM710 processors represent a significant improvement over the ARM610 processors. They have a higher maximum clock speed and a number of architectural improvements such as double the size of internal cache, this means that more of any process can be executed internally without accessing the (relatively) slow external memory. Other improvements are an improved write buffer and an enlarged Translation Lookaside Buffer in the MMU. All of these improvements increase the performance of the system and deliver more real performance than a simple comparison of clock speeds would indicate. The ARM710 has been optimised for integer performance. The FPA11 floating point coprocessor has a peak throughput of up to 5 MFLOPS and achieves an average throughput in excess of 3 MFLOPS for a range of calculations.
  • d-1000 — (computer)   Datamatic Corporation's first computer, which weighed 25 tons, took up 6,000 square feet and cost $1.5 million, produced some time after 1955.
  • f100-l — Ferranti F100-L
  • pdp-10 — (computer)   Programmed Data Processor model 10. The series of mainframes from DEC that made time-sharing real. It looms large in hacker folklore because of its adoption in the mid-1970s by many university computing facilities and research labs, including the MIT AI Lab, Stanford, and CMU. Some aspects of the instruction set (most notably the bit-field instructions) are still considered unsurpassed. The PDP-10 was eventually eclipsed by the VAX machines (descendants of the PDP-11) when DEC recognised that the PDP-10 and VAX product lines were competing with each other and decided to concentrate its software development effort on the more profitable VAX. The machine was finally dropped from DEC's line in 1983, following the failure of the Jupiter Project at DEC to build a viable new model. (Some attempts by other companies to market clones came to nothing; see Foonly and Mars.) This event spelled the doom of ITS and the technical cultures that had spawned the original Jargon File, but by mid-1991 it had become something of a badge of honourable old-timerhood among hackers to have cut one's teeth on a PDP-10. See TOPS-10, AOS, BLT, DDT, DPB, EXCH, HAKMEM, JFCL, LDB, pop, push.

7 letter words containing 10

  • 10base2 — (networking)   (Or "cheapernet") The variant of Ethernet that uses thin coaxial cable (RG-58 or similar), as opposed to 10base5 cable. The "10" means 10 Mbps, "base" means "baseband" as opposed to radio frequency and "2" means a maximum single cable length of 200m.
  • 10base5 — (networking)   An Ethernet network cabling specification operating at ten Mbps, "baseband" (as opposed to radio frequency), and with a maximum single cable length of 500 metres. This is normally carried on RG8 cable. Compare 10base2, 10baseT.
  • 10baset — (networking)   A variant of Ethernet which allows stations to be attached via twisted pair cable.
  • mc68010 — Motorola 68010
  • tops-10 — /tops-ten/ DEC's proprietary OS for the fabled PDP-10 machines, long a favourite of hackers but now effectively extinct. A fountain of hacker folklore. See also ITS, TOPS-20, TWENEX, VMS, operating system. TOPS-10 was sometimes called BOTS-10 (from "bottoms-ten") as a comment on the inappropriateness of describing it as the top of anything.

8 letter words containing 10

  • 100baset — (networking)   Any of several Fast Ethernet 100 MBps CSMA/CD standards for twisted pair cables, including: 100BaseTx (100 Mbps over two-pair Cat5 or better cable), 100BaseT4 (100 Mbps over four-pair Cat3 or better cable), 100BaseT2 (in committee; 100 Mbps over two-pair Cat3 or better cable). All are standards (or planned standards) under IEEE 802.3.
  • bliss-10 — (language)   A version of BLISS from CMU for the PDP-10.

9 letter words containing 10

  • 100basefx — (networking)   Fast Ethernet over optical fibre.
  • 100basetx — (networking)   The predominant form of Fast Ethernet. 100BaseTX runs over two pairs of wires in category 5 cable.
  • 100basevg — (networking)   A 100 MBps Ethernet standard specified to run over four pairs of category 3 UTP wires (known as voice grade, hence the "VG"). It is also called 100VG-AnyLAN because it was defined to carry both Ethernet and token ring frame types. 100BaseVG was originally proposed by Hewlett-Packard, ratified by the ISO in 1995 and practically extinct by 1998. 100BaseVG started in the IEEE 802.3u committee as Fast Ethernet. One faction wanted to keep CSMA/CD in order to keep it pure Ethernet, even though the collision domain problem limited the distances to one tenth that of 10baseT. Another faction wanted to change to a polling architecture from the hub (they called it "demand priority") in order to maintain the 10baseT distances, and also to make it a deterministic protocol. The CSMA/CD crowd said, "This is 802.3 -- the Ethernet committee. If you guys want to make a different protocol, form your own committee". The IEEE 802.12 committee was thus formed and standardised 100BaseVG. The rest is history.

12 letter words containing 10

On this page, we collect all words with 10. To make easier to find the right word we have divided all 56 words to groups according to their length. So you should go to appropriate page if can’t find the word that contains 10 that you are searching. Also you can use this page in Scrabble.

Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?