Result from Foreign Dictionaries (3 entries found)
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
TCP/IP
n 1: a set of protocols (including TCP) developed for the
internet in the 1970s to get data from one network device
to another [syn: {transmission control protocol/internet
protocol}, {TCP/IP}]
From The Jargon File (version 4.4.7, 29 Dec 2003) [jargon]:
TCP/IP
/T'C?P I?P/, n.
1. [Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol] The
wide-area-networking protocol that makes the Internet work, and the only
one most hackers can speak the name of without laughing or retching. Unlike
such allegedly ?standard? competitors such as X.25, DECnet, and the ISO
7-layer stack, TCP/IP evolved primarily by actually being used, rather than
being handed down from on high by a vendor or a heavily-politicized
standards committee. Consequently, it (a) works, (b) actually promotes
cheap cross-platform connectivity, and (c) annoys the hell out of corporate
and governmental empire-builders everywhere. Hackers value all three of
these properties. See {creationism}.
2. [Amateur Packet Radio] Formerly expanded as ?The Crap Phil Is Pushing?.
The reference is to Phil Karn, KA9Q, and the context was an ongoing
technical/political war between the majority of sites still running AX.25
and the TCP/IP relays. TCP/IP won.
From V.E.R.A. -- Virtual Entity of Relevant Acronyms (June 2013) [vera]:
TCPIP
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (RFC 793, IP),
"TCP/IP"
แสดงได้ทั้งความหมายของคำเดี่ยว และคำผสม ได้อย่างถูกต้อง
เช่น Secretary of State=รัฐมนตรีต่างประเทศของสหรัฐฯ (ในภาพตัวอย่าง),
High school=โรงเรียนมัธยมปลาย