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Etymology: [ 'h&b ] (noun.) 1649. probably alteration of 2hob.

merkez, tekerlek göbeği, dişli göbeği, poyra, göbek (kasnak, dişli vb. göbeği), mihrak, göbek, en önemli yer, kablo göbeği, yıldız göbek, tekerlek merkezi, bağlantı göbeği, (of) merkez, merkez/poyra, kama yuvası, pervane göbeği, the Hub Boston şehrinin takma ismi, muf,

1hub merkez  isim     ts
2hub tekerlek göbeği  isim     ts
3hub dişli göbeği  Mekanik     ts
4hub poyra     ts
5hub göbek (kasnak, dişli vb. göbeği)  Mühendislik     ts
6hub mihrak     ts
7hub göbek     ts
8hub en önemli yer     ts
9hub kablo göbeği  Bilgisayar,Teknik     ts
10hub yıldız göbek  Bilgisayar,Teknik     ts
11hub tekerlek merkezi     ts
12hub bağlantı göbeği     ts
13hub (of) merkez  isim     ts
14hub merkez/poyra     ts
15hub kama yuvası     ts
16hub pervane göbeği  Havacılık     ts
17hub the Hub Boston şehrinin takma ismi     ts
18hub muf     ts
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Kötülük, fenalık, yaramazlık,

19 Kötülük, fenalık, yaramazlık     ts
 

Generally, a term used to describe a device that serves as the center of a star-topology network *, plural of hub, No definition yet, Every major airline has its own hub or headquarter airport Thanks to short hops and connecting flights, using a central hub makes scheduling more efficient and boosts profits for the airlines A list of major carriers and there hubs are, The ridges produced on the spine of a book that has been hand sewn Sewing a book on cords leaves raised bands of twine running across the spine, and these hubs are visible from the outside of the finished book These days, hubs seen on machine sewn books are for decoration only, made by inserting small pieces of chipboard in the spine portion of the case, – Central locations where gas supplies from a variety of sources are aggregated and sold, The positive pair of metal dies from which working dies are struck - see Working Hubs, Online intermediaries that bring buyers and sellers together to facilitate transactions; also called "portals ", The central part, usually cylindrical, of a wheel; the nave, a computer networking device connecting several ethernet ports. See switch, A point where many routes meet and traffic is distributed, dispensed or diverted, A stake with a nail in it, used to mark a temporary point, See Hob, 3, A hardened, engraved steel punch for impressing a device upon a die, used in coining, etc, A goal or mark at which quoits, etc, A block for scotching a wheel, A screw hob, the central part of a car wheel (or fan or propeller etc) through which the shaft or axle passes, device used to connect cables from more than two computers together Can be used for peer-to-peer and local-area networks Mentioned in: Types of Networks See also: network Pictures: Photo 1, Photo 2, are cast, center of a wheel into which the spokes are placed; central point around which other things revolve; center, focus; center of activity; (Computers) central part of a disk that is held by the drive in order to make it turn at the correct speed; (Computers) common point of connection for devices in a network, the central part of a car wheel (or fan or propeller etc) through which the shaft or axle passes a center of activity or interest or commerce or transportation; a focal point around which events revolve; "the playground is the hub of parental supervision"; "the airport is the economic hub of the area, The hilt of a weapon, concentrator, of Axle box, See Illust, ] See Hubby, A hub is a network device that connects multiple computers on a LAN so they can communicate with one another, the rest of the network, and the Internet All users connected to a hub share the available network bandwidth (unlike a switch, which provides full bandwidth to each computer), A rough protuberance or projecting obstruction; as, a hub in the road, a center of activity or interest or commerce or transportation; a focal point around which events revolve; "the playground is the hub of parental supervision"; "the airport is the economic hub of the area", A hardware device that contains multiple independent but connected modules of network and internetworking equipment Hubs can be active (where they repeat signals set to them) or passive (where they do not repeat but merely split signals sent through them) Hub may also refer to a repeater, bridge, switch, router, or any combination of these, Like an Airport Hub is a connection point for different airplanes, a network hub is a meeting place for multiple network connections There are large hubs that you, the user, never sees They hum away in equipment rooms keeping traffic flowing smoothly And there are smaller hubs that are in classrooms, dormitories and offices around campus These smaller hubs take the signal from a faceplate and split it into four or more separate connections Note that when a computer is off of a hub it is sharing it's network connection with all the other computers off of that hub so if you are off of a four port hub, your network connection will be one fourth the speed as if it were off the faceplate alone, Generally, a device connected to several other devices; specifically in computer networks, a repeater in the center of a network with star topology, usually with 10BaseT or 100BaseT Ethernet, switching computer located in IDF "closet," joining a local network or a building to the backbone via a router / gateway; hubs join to network devices by means of "ports," each able to serve an IP address Departments in buildings with excess hub capacity can add devices by having IP addresses switched on; when all of a hub's ports are occupied, further expansion requires installation of another hub in the closet Hubs, like other switching units, don't have hard-drive storage the way regular computers do, but pass off information packets very rapidly, as in a super-efficient mailroom, An unintelligent network device that sends one signal to all of the stations connected to it, A device that connects the cables from computers and other devices such as printers in an ethernet local area network Traditionally, hubs are used for star topology networks, but they are often used with other configurations to make it easy to add and remove computers without bringing down the network Smart hubs or switching hubs are often used to improve performance by managing traffic, In a 10-base-T network, each machine is connected to a hub, which is in turn connected to the network or to other hubs Physically, they are small boxes with 4 or more connecting sockets for 10-base-T wiring If a hub is connected to another hub, the hubs are said to be cascaded All machines on a hub see the packets for all machines on that hub, which may limit communication speed See Router, You can describe a place as a hub of an activity when it is a very important centre for that activity. The island's social hub is the Cafe Sport = centre, The hub of a wheel is the part at the centre, A concentrator that joins multiple clients by means of a single link to the rest of the LAN A hub has several ports to which clients are connected directly, and one or more ports that can be used to connect the hub to the backbone or to other active network components A hub functions as a multiport repeater; signals received on any port are immediately retransmitted to all other ports of the hub Hubs function at the physical layer of the OSI Reference Model, Equipment that serves as the centralized connection point for a network or portion thereof Hubs are used for multiplexing, multi-port bridging functions, switching and test access They can be either passive or active and are not considered to be part of the cabling infrastructure, A networking device with multiple ports that allows you to connect workstations, servers or peripherals to a network, A device connected to several other devices In ARCnet, a hub is used to connect several computers together In a message handling service, a hub is used for the transfer of messages across the network, A device that splits one network cable into a set of separate cables, each connecting to a different computer Used in a local area network to create a small-scale network by connecting several computers together, A hardware device that contains multiple independent but connected modules of network and internetwork equipment Hubs can be active (where they repeat signals sent through them) or passive (where they do not repeat but merely split signals sent through them), As a network product, a hub may include a group of modem cards for dial-in users, a gateway card for connections to a Local Area Network (LAN), and a connection to a line, A central connection point Standard terminology for a device that connects multiple computers in a network, a device that splits one network cable into a set of separate cables, each connecting to a different computer; used in a local area network to create a small-scale network by connecting several computers together, A device used to create a small-scale network by providing a common connection to all devices on the network, A device at the center of a star topology network Hubs can be active (where they repeat signals set to them) or passive (where they do not repeat but merely split signals sent through them) Hub may refer to a repeater, bridge, switch, router, or any combination of these, A device that connects several other devices, usually in a star topology, A common connection point for devices in a network Hubs are commonly used to connect segments of a LAN A hub contains multiple ports When a packet arrives at one port, it is copied to the other ports so that all segments of the LAN can see all packets A passive hub serves simply as a conduit for the data, enabling it to go from one device (or segment) to another So-called intelligent hubs include additional features that enables an administrator to monitor the traffic passing through the hub and to configure each port in the hub Intelligent hubs are also called manageable hubs A third type of hub, called a switching hub, actually reads the destination address of each packet and then forwards the packet to the correct port, A device that provides additional connections for other devices For example, a USB hub is a USB device that provides connections for additional USB devices, a nebulous term, typically applied to a multiport repeater or concentrator consisting of a chassis with slots to be populated by cards, allowing it to be configured with various numbers and combinations of LAN ports Vendors of networking equipment often also have other types of devices that can be inserted in the slots such as terminal servers, bridges, routers, gateways, etc,

20 Generally, a term used to describe a device that serves as the center of a star-topology network *     ts
21 plural of hub     ts
22 No definition yet     ts
23 Every major airline has its own hub or headquarter airport Thanks to short hops and connecting flights, using a central hub makes scheduling more efficient and boosts profits for the airlines A list of major carriers and there hubs are     ts
24 The ridges produced on the spine of a book that has been hand sewn Sewing a book on cords leaves raised bands of twine running across the spine, and these hubs are visible from the outside of the finished book These days, hubs seen on machine sewn books are for decoration only, made by inserting small pieces of chipboard in the spine portion of the case     ts
25 – Central locations where gas supplies from a variety of sources are aggregated and sold     ts
26 The positive pair of metal dies from which working dies are struck - see Working Hubs     ts
27 Online intermediaries that bring buyers and sellers together to facilitate transactions; also called "portals "     ts
28hub The central part, usually cylindrical, of a wheel; the nave     ts
29hub a computer networking device connecting several ethernet ports. See switch     ts
30hub A point where many routes meet and traffic is distributed, dispensed or diverted - "Hongkong airport is one of the most important air traffic hubs in Asia."     ts
31hub A stake with a nail in it, used to mark a temporary point     ts
32hub See Hob, 3     ts
33hub A hardened, engraved steel punch for impressing a device upon a die, used in coining, etc     ts
34hub A goal or mark at which quoits, etc     ts
35hub A block for scotching a wheel     ts
36hub A screw hob     ts
37hub the central part of a car wheel (or fan or propeller etc) through which the shaft or axle passes     ts
38hub device used to connect cables from more than two computers together Can be used for peer-to-peer and local-area networks Mentioned in: Types of Networks See also: network Pictures: Photo 1, Photo 2     ts
39hub are cast     ts
40hub center of a wheel into which the spokes are placed; central point around which other things revolve; center, focus; center of activity; (Computers) central part of a disk that is held by the drive in order to make it turn at the correct speed; (Computers) common point of connection for devices in a network  isim     ts
41hub the central part of a car wheel (or fan or propeller etc) through which the shaft or axle passes a center of activity or interest or commerce or transportation; a focal point around which events revolve; "the playground is the hub of parental supervision"; "the airport is the economic hub of the area     ts
42hub The hilt of a weapon     ts
43hub concentrator     ts
44hub of Axle box     ts
45hub See Illust     ts
46hub ] See Hubby     ts
47hub A hub is a network device that connects multiple computers on a LAN so they can communicate with one another, the rest of the network, and the Internet All users connected to a hub share the available network bandwidth (unlike a switch, which provides full bandwidth to each computer)     ts
48hub A rough protuberance or projecting obstruction; as, a hub in the road     ts
49hub a center of activity or interest or commerce or transportation; a focal point around which events revolve; "the playground is the hub of parental supervision"; "the airport is the economic hub of the area"     ts
50hub A hardware device that contains multiple independent but connected modules of network and internetworking equipment Hubs can be active (where they repeat signals set to them) or passive (where they do not repeat but merely split signals sent through them) Hub may also refer to a repeater, bridge, switch, router, or any combination of these     ts
51hub Like an Airport Hub is a connection point for different airplanes, a network hub is a meeting place for multiple network connections There are large hubs that you, the user, never sees They hum away in equipment rooms keeping traffic flowing smoothly And there are smaller hubs that are in classrooms, dormitories and offices around campus These smaller hubs take the signal from a faceplate and split it into four or more separate connections Note that when a computer is off of a hub it is sharing it's network connection with all the other computers off of that hub so if you are off of a four port hub, your network connection will be one fourth the speed as if it were off the faceplate alone     ts
52hub Generally, a device connected to several other devices; specifically in computer networks, a repeater in the center of a network with star topology, usually with 10BaseT or 100BaseT Ethernet     ts
53hub switching computer located in IDF "closet," joining a local network or a building to the backbone via a router / gateway; hubs join to network devices by means of "ports," each able to serve an IP address Departments in buildings with excess hub capacity can add devices by having IP addresses switched on; when all of a hub's ports are occupied, further expansion requires installation of another hub in the closet Hubs, like other switching units, don't have hard-drive storage the way regular computers do, but pass off information packets very rapidly, as in a super-efficient mailroom     ts
54hub An unintelligent network device that sends one signal to all of the stations connected to it     ts
55hub A device that connects the cables from computers and other devices such as printers in an ethernet local area network Traditionally, hubs are used for star topology networks, but they are often used with other configurations to make it easy to add and remove computers without bringing down the network Smart hubs or switching hubs are often used to improve performance by managing traffic     ts
56hub In a 10-base-T network, each machine is connected to a hub, which is in turn connected to the network or to other hubs Physically, they are small boxes with 4 or more connecting sockets for 10-base-T wiring If a hub is connected to another hub, the hubs are said to be cascaded All machines on a hub see the packets for all machines on that hub, which may limit communication speed See Router     ts
57hub You can describe a place as a hub of an activity when it is a very important centre for that activity. The island's social hub is the Cafe Sport = centre     ts
58hub The hub of a wheel is the part at the centre     ts
59hub A concentrator that joins multiple clients by means of a single link to the rest of the LAN A hub has several ports to which clients are connected directly, and one or more ports that can be used to connect the hub to the backbone or to other active network components A hub functions as a multiport repeater; signals received on any port are immediately retransmitted to all other ports of the hub Hubs function at the physical layer of the OSI Reference Model     ts
60hub Equipment that serves as the centralized connection point for a network or portion thereof Hubs are used for multiplexing, multi-port bridging functions, switching and test access They can be either passive or active and are not considered to be part of the cabling infrastructure     ts
61hub A networking device with multiple ports that allows you to connect workstations, servers or peripherals to a network     ts
62hub A device connected to several other devices In ARCnet, a hub is used to connect several computers together In a message handling service, a hub is used for the transfer of messages across the network     ts
63hub A device that splits one network cable into a set of separate cables, each connecting to a different computer Used in a local area network to create a small-scale network by connecting several computers together     ts
64hub A hardware device that contains multiple independent but connected modules of network and internetwork equipment Hubs can be active (where they repeat signals sent through them) or passive (where they do not repeat but merely split signals sent through them)     ts
65hub As a network product, a hub may include a group of modem cards for dial-in users, a gateway card for connections to a Local Area Network (LAN), and a connection to a line     ts
66hub A central connection point Standard terminology for a device that connects multiple computers in a network     ts
67hub a device that splits one network cable into a set of separate cables, each connecting to a different computer; used in a local area network to create a small-scale network by connecting several computers together     ts
68hub A device used to create a small-scale network by providing a common connection to all devices on the network     ts
69hub A device at the center of a star topology network Hubs can be active (where they repeat signals set to them) or passive (where they do not repeat but merely split signals sent through them) Hub may refer to a repeater, bridge, switch, router, or any combination of these     ts
70hub A device that connects several other devices, usually in a star topology     ts
71hub A common connection point for devices in a network Hubs are commonly used to connect segments of a LAN A hub contains multiple ports When a packet arrives at one port, it is copied to the other ports so that all segments of the LAN can see all packets A passive hub serves simply as a conduit for the data, enabling it to go from one device (or segment) to another So-called intelligent hubs include additional features that enables an administrator to monitor the traffic passing through the hub and to configure each port in the hub Intelligent hubs are also called manageable hubs A third type of hub, called a switching hub, actually reads the destination address of each packet and then forwards the packet to the correct port     ts
72hub A device that provides additional connections for other devices For example, a USB hub is a USB device that provides connections for additional USB devices     ts
73hub a nebulous term, typically applied to a multiport repeater or concentrator consisting of a chassis with slots to be populated by cards, allowing it to be configured with various numbers and combinations of LAN ports Vendors of networking equipment often also have other types of devices that can be inserted in the slots such as terminal servers, bridges, routers, gateways, etc     ts
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Sözlük . Dictionary . Wörterbuch . λεξικό . Diccionario . 字典 . словарь . Dictionnaire . القاموس . Dizionario . מילון . Matokeo . واژه نامه . 辞書
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada hubs kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. hubs kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan hubs kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.

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