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  2. Group Policy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_Policy

    Group Policy. Group Policy is a feature of the Microsoft Windows NT family of operating systems (including Windows XP, Windows 7, Windows 8.1, Windows 10, Windows 11, and Windows Server 2003+) that controls the working environment of user accounts and computer accounts. Group Policy provides centralized management and configuration of operating ...

  3. Boundary object - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boundary_object

    Boundary object. In sociology and science and technology studies, a boundary object is information, such as specimens, field notes, and maps, used in different ways by different communities for collaborative work through scales. [1] Boundary objects are plastic, interpreted differently across communities but with enough immutable content (i.e ...

  4. Group theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_theory

    On the other hand, given a well-understood group acting on a complicated object, this simplifies the study of the object in question. For example, if G is finite, it is known that V above decomposes into irreducible parts (see Maschke's theorem). These parts, in turn, are much more easily manageable than the whole V (via Schur's lemma).

  5. Group object - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_object

    Group object. In category theory, a branch of mathematics, group objects are certain generalizations of groups that are built on more complicated structures than sets. A typical example of a group object is a topological group, a group whose underlying set is a topological space such that the group operations are continuous.

  6. Domain model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_model

    Sample domain model for a health insurance plan. In software engineering, a domain model is a conceptual model of the domain that incorporates both behavior and data. [1] [2] In ontology engineering, a domain model is a formal representation of a knowledge domain with concepts, roles, datatypes, individuals, and rules, typically grounded in a description logic.

  7. Cluster analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluster_analysis

    Cluster analysis or clustering is the task of grouping a set of objects in such a way that objects in the same group (called a cluster) are more similar (in some specific sense defined by the analyst) to each other than to those in other groups (clusters). It is a main task of exploratory data analysis, and a common technique for statistical ...

  8. Access control matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Access_Control_Matrix

    Access control matrix. In computer science, an access control matrix or access matrix is an abstract, formal security model of protection state in computer systems, that characterizes the rights of each subject with respect to every object in the system. It was first introduced by Butler W. Lampson in 1971.

  9. Abelian category - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abelian_category

    For example, the poset of subobjects of any given object A is a bounded lattice. Every abelian category A is a module over the monoidal category of finitely generated abelian groups; that is, we can form a tensor product of a finitely generated abelian group G and any object A of A.