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Encyclopedia article about lossage. Information about lossage in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. lossage - /los'*j/ The result of a bug or malfunction. This is a mass or collective noun. "What a loss!" and "What lossage!" are nearly synonymous.
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lossage [very common] The result of a bug or malfunction. This is a mass or collective noun. “ What a loss! ” and “ What lossage! Join the WikiAnswers Q&A community. Post a question or answer questions about "lossage" at WikiAnswers.
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Encrypting some stuff seems like a good idea. Mail, for example. If you stole my laptop, you wouldn't find anything interesting in the 142,113 email messages therein, but I'd rather you didn't get to look. ). It caused a little heartburn across major upgrades, but it never failed to work and it never lost any data.
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The Jargon File defines lossage as: The result of a bug or malfunction. This is a mass or collective noun. "What a loss!" and "What lossage!" are nearly synonymous. The former is slightly more particular to the speaker's present circumstances;
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For a list of additional problems you might encounter, see Note: Bugs and problems, and the file `etc/PROBLEMS' in the Emacs distribution. Recovering editing in an Emacs session that crashed.
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Encryption lossage...
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[very common] The result of a bug or malfunction. This is a mass or collective noun. “What a loss!” and “What lossage!” are nearly synonymous. Thus (for example) a temporary hardware failure is a loss, but bugs in an important tool (like a compiler) are serious lossage.
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Definition of lossage in the Online Dictionary. Multiple meanings, detailed information and synonyms for lossage. This is a mass or collective noun. "What a loss!" and "What lossage!" are nearly synonymous. The former is slightly more particular to the speaker's present circumstances;
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Styled-text lossage: Some mailers can give your email fancy appearance - bold charcters, underlining, different size fonts, colors, etc.
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[from Dr. Pangloss, the eternal optimist in Voltaire's "Candide"] In corporate DP shops, a common condition of severe but equally shared lossage resulting from the theory that as long as everyone in the organization has the exactly the same model of obsolete computer, everything will be fine.
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