English Dictionary
◊ TRANSPLANT
transplant
n 1: (surgery) tissue or organ transplanted from a donor to a
recipient; in some cases the patient can be both donor
and recipient [syn: {graft}]
2: an operation moving an organ from one person (the donor) to
another (the recipient) [syn: {transplantation}]
3: the act of uprooting and moving a plant to a new location
[syn: {transplanting}]
v 1: lift and reset in another soil or situation; "Transplant the
young rice plants" [syn: {transfer}]
2: in surgery [syn: {graft}]
3: transfer from one place or period to another; "The ancient
Greek story was transplanted into Modern America" [syn: {transfer},
{transpose}]
English Computing Dictionary
◊ DID YOU MEAN TRANSPARENT?
transparent
1. Not visible, hidden; said of a system which
functions in a manner not evident to the user. For example,
the {Domain Name System} transparently resolves a {fully
qualified domain name} into an {Internet address} without the
user being aware of it.
Compare this to what {Donald Norman
(http://www.atg.apple.com/Norman/)} calls "invisibility",
which he illustrates from the user's point of view:
"You use computers when you use many modern automobiles,
microwave ovens, games, CD players and calculators. You don't
notice the computer because you think of yourself as doing the
task, not as using the computer." ["The Design of Everyday
Things", New York, Doubleday, 1989, p. 185].
2. Fully defined, known, predictable; said of a
sub-system in which matters generally subject to volition or
stochastic state change have been chosen, measured, or
determined by the environment. Thus for transparent systems,
output is a known function of the inputs, and users can both
predict the behaviour and depend upon it.
(1996-06-04)