Technical communication

The Aviation (All Emcompassing) Industry CBT (Computer-Based Training) Committee (AICC) is an international association of technology-based training professionals. The AICC develops guidelines for aviation industry in the development, delivery, and evaluation of CBT and related training technologies. ...more on Wikipedia about "AICC"

An application programming interface (API) is the interface that a computer system or application provides in order to allow requests for service to be made of it by other computer programs, and/or to allow data to be exchanged between them. For instance, a computer program can (and often must) use its operating system's API to allocate memory and access files. Many types of systems and applications implement APIs, such as graphics systems, databases, networks, web services, and even some computer games. ...more on Wikipedia about "Application programming interface"

Audience Analysis is a task all technical writers need to perform early in a project. ...more on Wikipedia about "Audience analysis"

Basic English is a constructed language with a small number of words created by Charles Kay Ogden and described in his book Basic English: A General Introduction with Rules and Grammar (1930). The language is based on a simplified version of English. ...more on Wikipedia about "Basic English"

Channel, in communications (sometimes called communications channel), refers to the medium used to convey information from a sender (or transmitter) to a receiver. ...more on Wikipedia about "Channel (communications)"

The CITRUS (Comprehensive I18N Framework Towards Respectable Unix Systems) project aims to implement a complete multilingual programming environment for BSD-based operating systems. The goals include the creation of the following things for FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, BSD/OS and Dragonfly BSD: ...more on Wikipedia about "Citrus Project"

Community Informatics, also known as community networking, electronic community networking, or community technology refers to an emerging set of principles and practices concerned with the use of Information and Communications Technologies for personal, social, cultural or economic development within communities, for enabling the achievement of collaboratively determined community goals and for envigorating and empowering communities in relation to their larger social, economic, cultural and political environments. ...more on Wikipedia about "Community informatics"

In human-computer interaction, computer accessibility refers to the usability of a computer system by people with disabilities or age-related limitations. It is largely a software concern. However, when hardware or software is used to customize a computer for a disabled person, that equipment is known as Assistive Technology. ...more on Wikipedia about "Computer accessibility"

In information technology and telecommunications, the term configuration management or configuration control has the following meanings: ...more on Wikipedia about "Configuration management"

Fundamental to modern Information Architectures , and driven by Semantic Web technologies, Content re-appropriation is the act of searching, filtering, gathering, grouping, and aggregation which allows information to be related, classified and identified. This is achieved by applying syntactic or semantic meaning though intelligent tagging or artificial interpretation of fragmented content (see Resource Description Framework ). Hence, all information becomes valuable and interpretable. ...more on Wikipedia about "Content re-appropiation"

Context-sensitive help is a kind of online help that is obtained from a specific point in the state of the software, providing help for the situation that is associated with that state. ...more on Wikipedia about "Context-sensitive help"

Copy editing is the process by which an editor makes formatting changes and other improvements to text. Copy, in this case a noun, refers to material (such as handwritten or typewritten pages) to be set (as in typesetting) for printing. A person who performs the task of copy editing is called a copy editor. ...more on Wikipedia about "Copy editing"

DITA (Darwin Information Typing Architecture) is an XML-based architecture for authoring, producing, and delivering technical information. The architecture and a related DTD and a W3C-Schema was developed by IBM. ...more on Wikipedia about "DITA"

DocBook is a markup language for technical documentation, originally intended for authoring technical documents, related to computer hardware and software but which can be used for any other sort of documentation. ...more on Wikipedia about "DocBook"

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In general terms, documentation is any communicable material (such as text, video, audio, etc., or combinations thereof) used to explain some attributes of an object, system or procedure. It is often used to mean engineering or software documentation, which is usually paper books or computer readable files (such as HTML pages) that describe the structure and components, or on the other hand, operation, of a system/product. ...more on Wikipedia about "Documentation"

As opposed to the computer-based training of the 1980s, the term e-learning is most frequently used to refer to computer-based training which incorporates technologies that support interactivity beyond that which would be provided by a single computer. ...more on Wikipedia about "E-learning"

An English writing style is a way of using the English language. ...more on Wikipedia about "English writing style"

A fact sheet is a presentation of data on any subject in a format emphasizing brevity, key points of interest or concern, a fairly minimalist design aesthetic, and a general desire to convey the most relevant information in the least amount of space. As such, it is a medium ideally suited to the post-modern information age, when " facts" (to the extent they exist) proliferate in ever-increasing numbers while the time available to review and comprehend them diminishes. Fact sheets attempt to solve this problem by condensing information into an easy-to-read, straightforward, portable, and modular form of knowledge. They often contain lists, statistics, answers to common questions ( FAQs could be considered a form of fact sheet.), and how-to, "do-it-yourself" types of advice. In some cases they may be a summary or abridgement of a longer document. ...more on Wikipedia about "Fact sheet"

FAQ is an abbreviation for "Frequently Asked Question(s)". The term refers to listed questions and answers, all supposed to be frequently asked in some context, and pertaining to a particular topic. Since the acronym originated in textual media, its pronunciation varies; both "fak" and "F.A.Q." are commonly heard (and therefore, when used with an indefinite article, it is either "a FAQ" or "an FAQ"). Depending on usage, the term may refer specifically to a single frequently-asked question, or to an assembled list of many questions and their answers. ...more on Wikipedia about "FAQ"

FinTS or Financial Transaction Services is the successor of the German online banking standard HBCI. The FinTS-specification is publicly available on the ZKA website . ...more on Wikipedia about "FinTS"

A flowchart (also spelled flow-chart and flow chart) is a schematic representation of a process. They are commonly used in business/economic presentations to help the audience visualize the content better, or to find flaws in the process. ...more on Wikipedia about "Flowchart"

The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (FOLDOC) is an online, searchable encyclopedic dictionary of computing subjects. It was founded in 1985 by Denis Howe and is hosted by Imperial College, London. Howe has served as the Editor-in-Chief since the dictionary's inception, with visitors to the website able to make suggestions for additions or corrections to articles. ...more on Wikipedia about "Free On-line Dictionary of Computing"

The GNU Free Documentation License (GNU FDL or simply GFDL) is a copyleft license for free content, designed by the Free Software Foundation (FSF) for the GNU project. It is the open content counterpart to the GNU GPL. The current state of the license is version 1.2, the official text of which can be found here . ...more on Wikipedia about "GNU Free Documentation License"

In Britain, a green paper is a tentative government report of a proposal without any commitment to action; the first step in changing the law. Green papers may result in the production of a white paper. ...more on Wikipedia about "Green paper"

In electronics, a hardware description language or HDL is any language from a class of computer languages for formal description of electronic circuits. It can describe the circuit's operation, its design, and tests to verify its operation by means of simulation. ...more on Wikipedia about "Hardware description language" Please visit again shortopedia

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