copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
compounds - Life cycle, life-cycle or lifecycle? - English Language . . . The Wikipedia entry for Application_lifecycle_management links to the Software_Development_Life_Cycle so while I prefer the form "lifecycle" and believe use is trending that way generally (and especially in our industry of early-adopters) it is still often about context and audience –
Word for software which has been killed or is no longer supported Note: Microsoft Lifecycle Policy refers to Windows 95 (an unsupported product) as "obsolete" or support retired-see link for chart of 'Desktop operating systems Date of availability Support retired' dating format
Is there a clear preferred usage between *lifespan* and *life span* It is mainly a matter of style not definition Per Merriam-Webster (US): life span 1: the average length of life of a kind of organism or of a material object especially in a particular environment or under specified circumstances
is it possible to provide a single word for describing an item that . . . Galvanic anode —Wiki A galvanic anode [protects metal structures from corrosion] They are made from a metal alloy with a more "active" voltage (more negative reduction potential more positive electrochemical potential) than the metal of the structure
nouns - Runtime, run time, and run-time - English Language . . . run time, run-time, runtime, or execution time is the time during which a program is running (executing), in contrast to other phases of a program's lifecycle such as compile time, link time, load time, etc
What does don’t pave the cow path mean in this context? Cloud infrastructure is very different from traditional infrastructure and requires different approaches to really harness cloud value From dev test prod lifecycle management to deployment automation, patch management, monitoring and automation for autoscaling and disaster recovery
How did the word FLUKE come to be associated with luck or chance? I was thinking that the parasite known as the "fluke" came to be associated with unexplained phenomena (because its lifecycle was a mystery) and that the semantic leap from unexplained phenomena to the results of Luck or Chance is not that big of a leap
When to spell out or when the acronym itself is sufficient A "Definitions" section, like a glossary, can be an extremely useful resource for readers It doesn't follow, however, that readers will (a) read and thoroughly master the content in such a section before proceeding with the rest of the document, or (b) appreciate having to page back multiple times through numerous intervening pages (if the document is long) to find the appropriate definition