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Difference between revisions of "Stand alone application"

From Bioblast
(Created page with "{{MitoPedia |description=A '''Stand alone application''' is computer software that can work offline, i.e. does not necessarily require network connection to function or does not ...")
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{{MitoPedia O2k and high-resolution respirometry}}
{{MitoPedia O2k and high-resolution respirometry}}
{{MitoPedia topics}}
{{MitoPedia topics}}
'''Stand alone applications''' usually require an installation process before they run locally on users' PCs, whereas [[Web application]]s run on the world wide web and are accessed be the user through a web browser.
'''Stand alone applications''' usually require an installation process before they run locally on users' PCs, whereas [[web application]]s run on the world wide web and are accessed be the user through a web browser.
Β  Author: [[User:Weber Benno|Weber Benno]] 13:14, 23 February 2016 (CET)
Β  Author: [[User:Weber Benno|Weber Benno]] 13:14, 23 February 2016 (CET)

Revision as of 14:08, 1 March 2016


high-resolution terminology - matching measurements at high-resolution


Stand alone application

Description

A Stand alone application is computer software that can work offline, i.e. does not necessarily require network connection to function or does not even provide the possibility to connect to a network.


MitoPedia concepts: "MitoFit Quality Control System" is not in the list (MiP concept, Respiratory state, Respiratory control ratio, SUIT concept, SUIT protocol, SUIT A, SUIT B, SUIT C, SUIT state, Recommended, ...) of allowed values for the "MitoPedia concept" property. MitoFit Quality Control System"MitoFit Quality Control System" is not in the list (Enzyme, Medium, Inhibitor, Substrate and metabolite, Uncoupler, Sample preparation, Permeabilization agent, EAGLE, MitoGlobal Organizations, MitoGlobal Centres, ...) of allowed values for the "MitoPedia topic" property. 






Stand alone applications usually require an installation process before they run locally on users' PCs, whereas web applications run on the world wide web and are accessed be the user through a web browser.

Author: Weber Benno 13:14, 23 February 2016 (CET)