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Bridges Permanent replacement for missing teeth. <
Ãâó: dental-concepts.com/
bridge (also called the "wheel" in yoga) -- A backbend in which the body forms an arch, supported by the hands and feet. Ideally, the arms and legs should be straight and close together. Legs are bent in some variations to produce a different kind of stretch.
Ãâó: www.contortionhomepage.com/gloss1.html
bridge A device that connects two LANs (local-area networks) or two segments of the same LAN.Unlike routers, bridges are protocol-independent. They simply forward packets without analyzing and re-routing messages. Consequently, they are faster than routers, but also less versatile.
Ãâó: www.precidia.com/support/glossary.html
bridge A device that passes packets between multiple network segments using the same communications protocol. If a packet is destined for a user within the sender's own network segment, the bridge keeps the packet local. If the packet is bound for another segment, the bridge passes the packet onto the network backbone.
Ãâó: www.spacespin.com/glossary.html
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