From Working EDRM
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
- A document or program as well as a unit of storage or file management. Each file is a set of bytes (each byte typically consists of 8 bits) that is stored on some media, or inside an archive. Files can be transmitted over communication lines using communication protocols such as SMTP/POP3 (Mail), FTP, HTTP. Files may (or may not) have different attributes (metadata). There are many different types of files: data files, text files , program files, directory files, and so on. Different types of files store different types of information. For example, program files store programs, whereas text files store text.[1]
- An element of data storage in a file system. A collection of data or information that has a name, called the filename. Almost all information stored in a computer must be in a file. There are many different types of files: data files, text files, program files, directory files, and so on.[2] [3] [4]
- In word processing, a piece of text that is usually one document long.[5]
- In a database, a complete collection of records treated as one unit.[6]
- A collection of logically related data records.[7]
- A collection of data of information stored under a specified name on a disk.[8]
Footnotes
- ^ Ibis Consulting, Glossary.
- ^ Fios, E-Discovery Glossary, http://discoveryresources.org/01_electronic_discovery_glossary.html.
- ^ Vinson & Elkins LLP Practice Support, EDD Glossary.
- ^ RSI, Glossary.
- ^ Legal Electronic Document Institute, Basic Principles of Automated Litigation Support (2005).
- ^ Legal Electronic Document Institute, Basic Principles of Automated Litigation Support (2005).
- ^ Legal Electronic Document Institute, Basic Principles of Automated Litigation Support (2005).
- ^ Kroll Ontrack, Glossary of Terms, http://www.krollontrack.com/glossaryterms.