English Dictionary
◊ DID YOU MEAN START OUT?
start out
v 1: take the first step or steps in carrying out an action: "We
began working at dawn"; "Who will start?" "Get working
as soon as the sun rises!" [syn: {begin}, {get}, {start},
{set about}, {set out}, {commence}] [ant: {end}]
2: leave; "The family took off for Florida" [syn: {depart}, {part},
{start}, {set forth}, {set off}, {set out}, {take off}]
English Computing Dictionary
◊ START BIT
start bit
A {bit} which signals the start of transmission of
a character on a {serial line}. For an {RS-423} signal, the
line is normally at logical zero which there is no data and
the start bit is a logical one. The zero-one transition tells
the receiver when to start sampling the signal to extract the
data bits.
[Is this upside-down?]
(1995-02-02)