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Tech Support Fundamentals

This document provides definitions for various IT and computing terms from Course 1. It includes over 100 terms organized alphabetically from A-Z. Some key terms defined include: CPU, RAM, hard drive, operating system, browser, IP address, software, hardware, input/output devices, Internet, and more. The definitions provide a basic overview of what each term means to help someone new to IT support and computing understand common industry terminology.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
87 views12 pages

Tech Support Fundamentals

This document provides definitions for various IT and computing terms from Course 1. It includes over 100 terms organized alphabetically from A-Z. Some key terms defined include: CPU, RAM, hard drive, operating system, browser, IP address, software, hardware, input/output devices, Internet, and more. The definitions provide a basic overview of what each term means to help someone new to IT support and computing understand common industry terminology.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Glossary

IT Support

Terms and definitions from Course 1

#
404 Not Found: An error message you might see on websites that have been moved or
deleted

A
Abstraction: To take a relatively complex system and simplify it for our use

Address bus: Connects the CPU to the MCC and sends over the location of the data, but not
the data itself

Algorithm: A series of steps that solves specific problems.

Android: A mobile operating system based on Linux

Application: A computer program designed for a specific use

Application software: Any software created to fulfill a specific need, like a text editor, web
browser, or graphics editor

ARPANET: The earliest version of the Internet that we see today, created by the US
government project DARPA in the 1960s

ASCII: The oldest character encoding standard used is ASCII. It represents the English
alphabet, digits, and punctuation marks

Assembly language: A language that allowed computer scientists to use human readable
instructions, assembled into code that the machines could understand

ATA: The most common interface that hard drives use to connect to our system

ATX (Advanced Technology eXtended): The most common form factor for motherboards

Automation: It makes processes work automatically

B
Backward compatible: It means older hardware works with newer hardware

Binary system: The communication that a computer uses is referred to as binary system, also
known as base-2 numeral system

Bios (Basic Input Output Services): The BIOS is software that helps initialize the hardware in
our computer and gets our operating system up and running

BIOS/UEFI: A low-level software that initializes our computer's hardware to make sure
everything is good to go

Block storage: It improves faster handling of data because the data isn't stored in one long
piece but in blocks, so it can be accessed quicker

Boot: To start up a computer

Bootloader: A small program that loads the operating system

Browser: A user interface for displaying and interacting with web pages

BYOD (Bring Your Own Device): Refers to the practice of allowing people to use their own
personal devices for work

Byte: A group of 8 bits

C
Cache: The assigned stored location for recently or frequently accessed data; on a mobile app
it is where anything that was changed or created with that app is stored

Character encoding: Is used to assign our binary values to characters so that we as humans
can read them

Charge cycle: One full charge and discharge of a battery

Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA): Regulates the information we show to
children under the age of 13

Chipset: It decides how components talk to each other on our machine

Chrome OS: A Linux-based operating system designed by Google

Clients: A device that receives data from a server

Clock cycle: When you send a voltage to the clock wire

Clock speed: The maximum number of clock cycles that it can handle in a set in a certain time
period

Clock wire: When you send or receive data, it sends a voltage to that clock wire to let the CPU
know it can start doing calculations

Coding: Translating one language to another


Command Line Interface (CLI): A shell that uses text commands to interact with the operating
system

Compiled programming language: A language that uses human readable instructions, then
sends them through a compiler

Computer: A device that stores and processes data by performing calculations

Computer file: Data that we store and a file can be anything, a word document, a picture, a
song, literally anything

Copyright: Used when creating original work

CPU: Central processing unit

CPU sockets: A CPU socket is a series of pins that connect a CPU’s processor to the PC’s
motherboard

Cryptography: The overarching discipline that covers the practice of coding and hiding
messages from third parties

D
DARPA: A US government project in the 1960s that went on to create the earliest version of the
Internet that we see today

Data blocks: Data that can be broken down into many pieces and written to different parts of
the hard disk

Data sizes: Metrics that refer to data sizes including bit, byte, kilobyte, kibibyte, and megabyte

DDR SDRAM (Double Data Rate SDRAM): A type of RAM that is faster, takes up less power,
and has a larger capacity than earlier SDRAM versions

Decimal form- base 10 system: In the decimal system, there are 10 possible numbers you can
use ranging from zero to nine

Desktop: The main screen where we can navigate our files, folders, and applications

Digital divide: The growing skills gap between people with and without digital literacy skills

DIMM: Dual Inline Memory Module

Display port: Port which also outputs audio and video

Distribution: A version of the operating system

Distributions: Some common Linux distributions are Ubuntu, Debian, and Red Hat

Domain name: A website name; the part of the URL following www.

Domain Name System (DNS): A global and highly distributed network service that resolves
strings of letters, such as a website name, into an IP address
DRAM: Dynamic Random Access Memory

Drivers: The drivers contain the instructions our CPU needs to understand external devices like
keyboards, webcams, printers

DVI: DVI cables generally just output video

E
Electrostatic discharge: Electrostatic discharge is a sudden and momentary flow of electric
current between two electrically charged objects caused by contact, an electrical short or
dielectric breakdown

Error message: Helpful indicators that can point you in the right direction

Etcher.io: A tool you can use to load an install image onto your USB device and make it
bootable

Ethernet cable: It lets you physically connect to the network through a cable

.exe: A file extension found in Windows for an executable file

Expansion slots: Give us the ability to increase the functionality of our computer

External Data Bus (EDB): It's a row of wires that interconnect the parts of our computer

F
Factory reset: Resetting a device to the settings it came with from the factory

Fiber optic cable: Fiber optic cables contain individual optical fibers which are tiny tubes made
of glass about the width of a human hair. Unlike copper, which uses electrical voltages, fiber
cables use pulses of light to represent the ones and zeros of the underlying data

File extension: The appended part of a filename that tells us what type of file it is in certain
operating systems

File handling: A process of storing data using a program

File system: A system used to manage files

Finder: The file manager for all Macs

Firmware: Software that's permanently stored on a computer component

Folders/Directories: Used to organize files

Form factor: A mathematical way to compensate for irregularities in the shape of an object by
using a ratio between its volume and height

G
GIT: A version control system that helps keep track of changes made to files and directories

Globalization: The movement that lets governments, businesses, and organizations


communicate and integrate together on an international scale

H
Hard drive: It is a long term memory component that holds all of our data, which can include
music, pictures, applications

Hardware: External or internal devices and equipment that help you perform major functions

Hardware resource deficiency: It refers to the lack of system resources like memory, hard
drive space, etc

HDD (Hard disk drive): Hard disk drives, or HDDs, use a spinning platter and a mechanical
arm to read and write information

HDMI: A type of cable that outputs both video and audio

Heatsink: It is used to dissipate heat from our CPU

HFS+/APFS: HFS+ is a journaling system developed by Apple Inc. and APFS is another but
more encrypted Apple journaling system

Hostname: Used to identify the computer when it needs to talk to other computers

Hubs: Devices that serve as a central location through which data travels through

I
Information technology: The use of digital technology, like computers and the internet, to store
and process data into useful information

Input/Output device: A device that performs input and output, including monitors, keyboards,
mice, hard disk drives, speakers, bluetooth headsets, webcams, and network adapters

Install image: A downloadable operating system image used to install an operating system on
a device

Instruction set: A list of instructions that our CPU is able to run

Internet: A worldwide system of interconnected networks

Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN): Where website names
are registered

Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4): An address that consists of 32 bits separated into four
groups

Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6): An address that consist of a 128 bits, four times the
amount that IPv4 uses
Internet service provider (ISP): A company that provides a consumer an internet connection

Internet of Things (IoT): The concept that more and more devices are connected to the
internet in a smarter fashion such as smart thermostats that turn off the air conditioner when you
leave and turn it on when you come back

Interpreted programming language: A language that isn't compiled ahead of time

I/O management: Anything that can give us input or that we can use for output of data

iOS: A mobile operating system developed by Apple Inc.

IP address: The most common protocol used in the network layer, used to helps us route
information

ITX (Information Technology eXtended): A form factor for motherboards that is much smaller
than ATX boards

K
Kernel: The main core of an operating system that creates processes, efficiently schedules
them, and manages how processes are terminated

L
Land Grid Array (LGA): It is a type of CPU socket that stick out of the motherboard

Lightning adaptor: One of the standard power, data and display connector types used in
mobile devices

Linux OS: Linux is one of the largest an open source operating system used heavily in
business infrastructure and in the consumer space

Logic gates: Allow transistors to do more complex tasks, like decide where to send electrical
signals depending on logical conditions

Logs: Files that record system events on our computer

M
MAC address: A globally unique identifier attached to an individual network interface. It's a 48-
bit number normally represented by six groupings of two hexadecimal numbers

Mac OS: Apple's operating system

Mb/s: megabit per second, which is a unit of data transfer rate

Memory controller chip (MCC): A bridge between the CPU and the RAM

Memory usage: The amount of memory available in your system as well as what memory is
currently being used by other applications
Memory management: One of the functions that a kernel performs; it optimizes memory usage
and make sure our applications have enough memory to run

Metadata: Tells us everything we need to know about a file, including who created it, when it
was last modified, who has access to it, and what type of file it is.

Micro display port: One of the standard power, data and display connector types used in
mobile devices

Micro HDMI: One of the standard power, data and display connector types used in mobile
devices

Micro USB: One of the standard power, data and display connector types used in mobile
devices

Microsoft Terminal Services Client: A client program used to create RDP connections to
remote computers

Mini HDMI: One of the standard power, data and display connector types used in mobile
devices

Mini USB: One of the standard power, data and display connector types used in mobile devices

Motherboard: The body or circulatory system of the computer that connects all the pieces
together

N
Network: The interconnection of computers

Network Address Translation (NAT): A mitigation tool that lets organizations use one public
IP address and many private IP addresses within the network

Network stack: A set of hardware or software that provides the infrastructure for a computer

Networking: Managing, building and designing networks

Networking protocols: A set of rules for how we transfer data in a network

Northbridge: interconnects stuff like RAM and video cards.

NVMe (NVM Express): interface standard which allows greater throughput of data and
increased efficiency.

O
Open SSH: The most popular program to use SSH within Linux

Open Source: This means the developers will let other developers share, modify, and distribute
their software for free
Operating system: The whole package that manages our computers resources and lets us
interact with it

Overclocking: it increases the rate of your CPU clock cycles in order to perform more tasks

P
PC: It means personal computer, which technically means a computer that one person uses

PCI Express: Peripheral Component Interconnect Express

PDA (Personal Digital Assistant): Allows computing to go mobile

Peripherals: the external devices which we connect to our computer that add functionality,
like: a mouse, a keyboard, and a monitor
Permission denied: An error message you might find when accessing a protected file

Pin Grid Array (PGA): CPU socket where the pins are located on the processor itself

Plink (PuTTY Link): A tool built into the command line after PuTTY is installed that is used to
make remote SSH connections

Ports: Connection points that we can connect devices to that extend the functionality of our
computer

POST (Power On Self Test): It figures out what hardware is on the computer

Powershell: A shell (program that interprets text commands) for Windows

Power supply: Converts electricity from our wall outlet onto a format that our computer can use

Power user: Above average computer users

Process management: The capacity to manage the many programs in a system - when to run
them, the order they run in, how many resources they take up, how long they run, etcetera

Process scheduler: The part of the kernel that makes multitasking possible

Programming: Coding in a programming language

Programming language: Special languages that software developers use to write instructions
for computers to execute

Programs: Basic instructions that tell the computer what to do

Punch cards: A sequence of cards with holes in them to automatically perform calculations
instead of manually entering them by hand

Q
Qwiklabs: An online platform which provides training in cloud services
R
RAM: Random Access Memory

Registers: An accessible location for storing the data that our CPU works with

Reimaging: The process of reimaging involves wiping and reinstalling an operating system
using a disk image which is a copy of an operating system

Remote connection: The ability to connect an authorized person to a computer or network


remotely; allows us to manage multiple machines from anywhere in the world

Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP): A secure network communication protocol developed by


Microsoft that allows a user to connect to another device remotely

Return merchandise authorization (RMA): The process of receiving returned merchandise


and authorizing a refund

RGB model: RGB or red, green, and blue model is the basic model of representing colors

ROM chip (Read Only Memory): A read-only memory chip where the BIOS is stored

Root cause: The main factor that's causing a range of issues

Router: A device that knows how to forward data between independent networks

RPM: Revolutions per minute

S
SATA: The most popular serial ATA drive, which uses one cable for data transfers

Safe operating temperature: The temperature range in which rechargeable batteries must be
kept in order to avoid demanage

Scalability: The measure of a system’s ability to increase or decrease in performance and cost
in response to varying loads in system processing demands

SDRAM: It stands for Synchronous DRAM, this type of RAM is synchronized to our systems'
clock speed allowing quicker processing of data

Server logs: Text files that contains recorded information about activities performed on a
specific web server in a defined period of time

Servers: Devices that provide data to other devices that request that data, also known as a
client

Scripting: Coding in a scripting language

Script: It is run by an interpreter, which interprets the code into CPU instructions just in time to
run them

Scripts: Mainly used to perform a single or limited range task


Shell: A program that interprets text commands and sends them to the OS to execute

Standoffs: Used to raise and attach your motherboard to the case

SOC (System On a Chip): Packs the CPU, Ram, and sometimes even the storage onto a
single chip

Software: The intangible instructions that tell the hardware what to do

Software bug: An error in software that causes unexpected results

Software management: A broad term used to refer to any and all kinds of software that are
designed to manage or help manage some sort of project or task

Southbridge: It maintains our IO or input/output controllers, like hard drives and USB devices
that input and output data.

SSH (Secure shell): A protocol implemented by other programs to securely access one
computer from another.

SSH authentication key: A secure authentication method for accessing a computer from other
device

SSH client: A program you must have installed on your device in order to establish an SSH
connection with another device

SSH server: Software installed on a machine that allows for that device to accept an SSH
connection

Standardization: A systematic way of naming hosts

Swap space: The allocated space where the virtual memory is stored on the hard drive when
the amount of physical memory space is used up or full

SSD: Solid State Drive

Switches: Devices that help our data travel

System: A system refers to a group of hardware components and software components that
work together to fun the programs or processes in the computer

System settings: Settings like display resolution, user accounts, network, devices, etc

System software: Software used to keep our core system running, like operating system tools
and utilities

T
Task bar: It gives us quick options and shows us information like network connectivity, the date,
system notifications, sound etc

Terminal: A text based interface to the computer


Thermal paste: A substance used to better connect our CPU and heat sink, so the heat
transfers from to the other better

Time slice: A very short interval of time that gets allocated to a process for CPU execution

Transfer Control Protocol (TCP): A protocol that handles reliable delivery of information from
one network to another

Troubleshooting: The ability to diagnose and resolve a problem

Type-C connector: A type of USB connector meant to replace many peripheral connections

U
Ubuntu: The most popular Linux consumer distribution

UEFI: United Extensible Firmware Interface

USB (Universal Serial Bus): A connection standard for connecting peripherals to devices such
as computers

USB-C adapter: One of the standard power, data and display connector types used in mobile
devices

UTF-8: The most prevalent encoding standard used today

Uniform Resource Locator (URL): A web address similar to a home address

User name: A unique identifier for a user account

User space: The aspect of an operating system that humans interact with directly like
programs, such as text editors, music players, system settings, user interfaces, etcetera

V
Virtual Box: An application you can use to install Linux and have it completely isolated from
your machine

Virtual machine (VM): An application that uses physical resources like memory, CPU and
storage, but they offer the added benefit of running multiple operating systems at once

Virtual memory: A combination of hard drive space and RAM that acts like memory which our
processes can use

VPN (Virtual private network): A secure method of connecting a device to a private network
over the internet

W
WannaCry Attack: A cyber attack that started in Europe and infected hundreds of thousands of
computers across the world
Wireless networking (Wi-Fi): Networks you connect to through radios and antennas

World Wide Web (WWW): The information system that enables documents and other web
resources to be accessed over the Internet

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