•
Pac-Man – a
video arcade game. : The term comes from
paku paku which is a Japanese
onomatopoeia used for noisy eating; similar to
chomp chomp. The game was released in Japan with the name
Puck-Man, and released in the US with the name
Pac-Man, fearing that kids may deface a Puck-Man cabinet by changing the
P to an
F. •
Patch – A set of changes to a
computer program or its supporting data designed to update, fix, or improve it. : Historically, software suppliers distributed patches on
paper tape or on
punched cards, expecting the recipient to cut out the indicated part of the original tape (or deck), and patch in (hence the name) the replacement segment •
PCMCIA – the standards body for
PC card and
ExpressCard, expansion card form factors. : The
Personal
Computer
Memory
Card
International
Association is an international standards body that defines and promotes standards for expansion devices such as
modems and external
hard disk drives to be connected to
notebook computers. Over time, the acronym PCMCIA has been used to refer to the PC card
form factor used on notebook computers. A twist on the acronym is
People
Can't
Memorize
Computer
Industry
Acronyms. •
PEBKAC – an acronym for "Problem Exists Between Keyboard And Chair", which is a code frequently used by a customer service representative (CSR) to annotate their notes and identify the source of a problem as the person who is reporting the problem rather than the system being blamed. This is a thinly veiled reference to the CSR's opinion that the person reporting the problem is the problem. Example: PEBKAC, no resolution possible. See also
ID10T. •
Pentium – a series of
microprocessors from
Intel. :The fifth microprocessor in the
80x86 series. It would have been named i586 or 80586, but Intel decided to name it
Pentium (penta = five) after it lost a trademark infringement lawsuit against
AMD due to a judgment that numbers like "286", "386", and "486" cannot be trademarked. According to Intel,
Pentium conveys a meaning of strength, like
titanium. :Since some early Pentium chips contained a mathematical precision error, it has been jokingly suggested that the reason for the chip being named Pentium rather than 586 was that Intel chips would calculate 486 + 100 = 585.99999948. •
Perl – an
interpreted scripting language. :Perl was originally named
Pearl, after the "pearl of great price" of
Matthew 13:46.
Larry Wall, the creator of Perl, wanted to give the language a short name with positive connotations and claims to have looked at (and rejected) every three- and four-letter word in the dictionary. He even thought of naming it after his wife Gloria. Before the language's official release Wall discovered that there was already a programming language named
Pearl, and changed the spelling of the name. Although the original manuals suggested the
backronyms "Practical Extraction and Report Language" and "Pathologically Eclectic Rubbish Lister", these were intended humorously. •
PHP – a server-side
scripting language :Originally named "
Personal
Home
Page Tools" by creator
Rasmus Lerdorf, it was rewritten by developers
Zeev Suraski and
Andi Gutmans who gave it the recursive name "
PHP
Hypertext
Preprocessor". Lerdorf currently insists the name should not be thought of as standing for anything, for he selected "Personal Home Page" as the name when he did not foresee PHP evolving into a general-purpose programming language. •
Pine –
e-mail client. :Many people believe that Pine stands for "
Pine
Is
Not
Elm". However, one of its original authors, Laurence Lundblade, insists this was never the case and that it started off simply as a word and not an acronym; his first choice of a
backronym for pine would be "Pine Is Nearly Elm". Over time it was changed to mean
Program for Internet News and E-mail. •
ping – a computer network tool used to detect hosts. :The author of ping,
Mike Muuss, named it after the pulses of sound made by a
sonar called a "ping". Later
Dave Mills provided the backronym "
Packet
Inter
net
Groper". •
Python – an
interpreted scripting programming language. :Named after the television series
Monty Python's Flying Circus. ==R==