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Page 1
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`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1010
`
`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1010
`Page 1
`
`

`

`PUBLISHED BY
`Microsoft Press
`
`A Division of Microsoft Corporation
`One Microsoft Way
`Redmond, Washington 98052-6399
`
`Copyright © 1997 by Microsoft Corporation
`
`All rights reserved. No part of the contents of this book may be reproduced or transmitted
`in any form or by any means without the written permission of the publisher.
`
`Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data pending.
`ISBN 1-57231-743-4
`
`Printed and bound in the United States of America.
`
`123456789 QMQM 210987
`
`Distributed to the book trade in Canada by Macmillan of Canada, a division of Canada
`Publishing Corporation.
`
`A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
`
`Microsoft Press booksare available through booksellers and distributors worldwide. For further
`information about international editions, contact your local Microsoft Corporation office. Or
`contact Microsoft Press International directly at fax (425) 936-7329. Visit our Website at
`mspress.microsoft.com.
`
`Macintosh, Power Macintosh, QuickTime, and TrueType fonts are registered trademarks of
`Apple Computer, Inc. Intel is a registered trademark of Intel Corporation. DirectInput, DirectX,
`Microsoft, Microsoft Press, MS-DOS, Visual Basic, Visual C++, Win32, Win32s, Windows,
`Windows NT, and XENIX are registered trademarks and ActiveMovie, ActiveX, and Visual
`J++ are trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. Java is a trademark of Sun Microsystems, Inc.
`Other product and company names mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respec-
`tive owners.
`
`Acquisitions Editor: Kim Fryer
`Project Editors: Maureen Williams Zimmerman, Anne Taussig
`Technical Editors: Dail Magee Jr., Gary Nelson, Jean Ross, Jim Fuchs, John Conrow,
`Kurt Meyer, Robert Lyon, Roslyn Lutsch
`
`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1010
`Page 2
`
`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1010
`Page 2
`
`

`

` arithmetic expression
`
`the military. ARPANET was the network from which
`arithmetic expression \arith-metik eks-presh~-
`an\ v, A series of elements, including data labels
`the Internet evolved. See also Internet, MILNET,
`ARP request \irp* ra-kwest’, A-R-P’\ 7. Short for
`and constants as well as numbers, that are joined
`Address Resolution Protocol request. An ARP
`by arithmetic operators, such as + and —, and can
`packet containing the Internet address of a host
`be calculated to produce a value.
`computer, The receiving computer responds with
` lojik
`arithmetic
`logic unit
`\ar-ith-metik
`yoonit\ ”. A component of a microprocessor
`or passes
`along the
`corresponding Ethernet
`chip used for arithmetic, comparative, and logical
`address. See also ARP, Ethernet, IP address, packet.
`
`functions, Acronym; ALU (A°L-U"). See also gate array \or-a°\ mn, In programming,alist of data val-
`(definition 1).
`ues, all of the same type, any element of which
`arithmetic operation \a-rith*mo-tik op-ar-a ‘shan,
`can be referenced by an expression consisting of
`the array name followed by an indexing expres-
`ar-ith-metik\ #. Any of the standard calculations
`sion. Arrays are part of the fundamentals of data
`performed in arithmetic—addition,
`subtraction,
`multiplication, or division. The term is also used in
`structures, which, in turn, are a major fundamental
`reference to negative numbers andabsolute values.
`of computer programming. See also array element,
`index, record! vector.
`arithmetic operator \ar-ith-metik op“ar-a-tar\ 7.
`An operator that performs an arithmetic operation:
`array element \or-4° el’a-mant\ 1. A data value in
`an array.
`+, -, x, or /, An arithmetic operator usually takes
`nm. A group of
`one or two arguments. See a/so argument, binary,
`array processor \ar-a° pros e-sar\
`logical operator, operator (definition 1), unary.
`interconnected,
`identical processors operating
`.arj \dot A-R-J°\. m, The DOS file extension used
`synchronously, often under the control of a central
`processor.
`with archive files created with the ARJ compres-
`arrow key \ar°6 ké\ . Any of four keys labeled
`sion program.
`-army.mil \dot-ar°mé-dot-mil*, dot-ar°mé-dot-M-I-
`with arrows pointing up, down,
`left, and right,
`L*\ ». On the Internet,
`the major geographic
`used to move the cursor vertically or horizontally
`on the display screen or,
`in some programs,
`to
`domain specifying that an address belongs to the
`United States Army.
`extend the highlight. See the illustration.
`ARP \A°R-P’, arp\ 7. Acronym for Address Resolu-
`tion Protocol. A TCP/IP protocol for determining
`the hardware address (or physical address) of a
`node on a local area network connected to the
`Internet, when only the IP address (or logical
`address) is known. An ARP request is sent to the
`network, and the node that has the IP address
`responds with its hardware address. Although ARP
`technically refers only to finding the hardware
`address, and RARP (for Reversed ARP) refers to the
`reverse procedure, ARP is commonly used for
`both senses. See also IP address, TCP/IP.
`ARPANET\ar’pa-net’, ATR-P-A-N"E-T’\ 7. A large
`wide area network created in the 1960s by the U.S.
`Department
`of Defense Advanced Research
`Projects Agency (ARPA, renamed DARPA in the
`1970s)
`for
`the free exchange of
`information
`between universities and research organizations,
`although the military also used this network for
`communications. In the 1980s MILNET, a separate
`network, was spun off from ARPANET for use by
`
`(when Num Lockis off)
`
`Arrow keys
`
`Arrow keys
`Arrow key. When Num Lockis off, the arrow keys
`on the number keypad can be used.
`
`article \dr‘ta-kal\ n. A message that appears in an
`Internet newsgroup. Also called post. See also
`newsgroup.
`
`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1010
`Page 3
`
`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1010
`Page 3
`
`

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