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A Berkeley socket is an application programming interface (API) for Internet domain sockets and Unix domain sockets, used for inter-process communication (IPC). It is commonly implemented as a library of linkable modules.
At the time the NetManage socket was the only 100% DLL-based, multi-threaded product for Windows 3.0 available. The first edition of the specification was authored by Martin Hall, Mark Towfiq of Microdyne (later Sun Microsystems ), Geoff Arnold of Sun Microsystems , and Henry Sanders and J Allard of Microsoft , with assistance from many others.
The Berkeley r-commands are a suite of computer programs designed to enable users of one Unix system to log in or issue commands to another Unix computer via TCP/IP computer network. [1] The r-commands were developed in 1982 by the Computer Systems Research Group at the University of California, Berkeley , based on an early implementation of ...
Net/2 was the basis for two separate ports of BSD to the Intel 80386 architecture: the free 386BSD by William and Lynne Jolitz, and the proprietary BSD/386 (later renamed BSD/OS) by Berkeley Software Design (BSDi). 386BSD itself was short-lived, but became the initial code base of the NetBSD and FreeBSD projects that were started shortly ...
The Berkeley Packet Filter (BPF; also BSD Packet Filter, classic BPF or cBPF) is a network tap and packet filter which permits computer network packets to be captured and filtered at the operating system level.
RISC-V, the fifth Berkeley RISC ISA, with 64- or 128-bit address spaces, and the integer core extended with floating point, atomics and vector processing, and designed to be extended with instructions for networking, I/O, and data processing. A specification for a 64-bit superscalar design, "Rocket", is available for download.
University of California, Berkeley: Astronomy Analyzing radio frequencies from space to search for extraterrestrial life. Sub project: Astropulse: SETI@home beta: see above 2006-01-12 GPU CPU University of California, Berkeley: Software testing: Test project for SETI@home: SIMAP: 5 papers [100] 2006-04-26 No University of Vienna: Molecular biology
VLSI layout of an inverter circuit using Magic software. Magic is an electronic design automation (EDA) layout tool for very-large-scale integration (VLSI) integrated circuit (IC) originally written by John Ousterhout and his graduate students at UC Berkeley.