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    EXHIBIT 14

    Case 1:12-cv-10576-DJC Document 64-14 Filed 04/22/13 Page 1 of 4

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    Roy LathamComputer Graphics SystemsDevelopment CorporationMountain View, CA 94043-2350USA

    The fll'St edition of this work, published in 1991, wns entitled The Dictilmaty ofComputer GraphicsTeclznolcgy and Applications.Library of Congress Catllloging-in-Publication DataRoy Latham.

    The dictionary of computer graphics and virtual reality IRoy Latham. - 2nd cd.p. em.Includes bibliographical references.ISBN 0-387-94405-2

    I. Computer graphics- Dictionaries. 2. Virtual realityDictionaries. I. Title.T385.L38 1995006.6'03--dc20 94-36569

    Printed on acid-free paper. 1995, 1991 Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.All rights reserved. This work may not be translated or copied in whole or in part without the writtenpermission of the. publisher (Springer-Verlag New York, Inc., 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY10010, USA), except for brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis. Usc in connection with any form of illformation storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software,or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed is forbidden.The usc of general descriptive names, trade names, trademarks, etc., in this publication, even if theformer are not especially identified, is not to be taken as a sign that such names, as understood bythe Trade Marks and Merchandise Marks Act, may accordingly be used freely by anyone.Production managed by Laura Carlson; manufacturing supervised by Genieve Shaw.Photocomposed copy prepared from the author's file.Printed and bound by R.R. Donnclley and Sons, Harrisonburg, VA.Printed in the United States of America.9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1ISBN 0-387-94405-2 Springer-Verlag New York Berlin Heidelberg

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    mages, an undesirectrom one frame to th.'l culling algorithm e" Ot

    a particular model Ofnvuonment to run 0ity. 2 n. : An i n t e r f a c ~;uch as a frame buffer.Jerent scenario usuallysequence representinge fiction entertainment,. Inons.ETSCANNER.!rface + (for UNIX?)] :ng se t of standardse applications amongto other multitaskingof gray or colors in anJr regions are apparent,apply posterization.

    :1. PHIGS, associating a!rsal.: description language:o drive laser printers;:hat must be processedultimately completelyg or clipping are notn a game system oncetpted by hobbyists andesting the purchasing:tg. 2 : Public Relations;corporate image. 3 :to live and work in the

    Pratt projection pipeline 109rratt : The standard text Digital Image Processing by William K. Pratt,John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1978.preemptive scheduling: A means of scheduling the sharing of commoncomputer or graphics resources in which user applications are forcedto relinquish use of resources; currently rarely implemented inwindow systems.primitive n. : One of the objects known by a graphics system andavailable to users for the construction of more complex graphics

    images. For example, most graphics systems have lines and trianglesas primitives; a polygon might also be a primitive, or it might be leftto the user to form a polygon from triangles. A system may includeboth geometric primitives an d raster primitives, the latter includingraster fonts and operations on pixel data.Printer Control Language : -Sec PCL.prioritization n. : The sorting of graphics objects into order of occlusion.priority-ordered : Objects ordered from near to far for occlusion processingin the rendering of a graphics image; the presence of intersecting,concave, or cyclically overlapping objects may prevent priority-ordering.prismatic joint n. : In a robotic manipulator, a joint that changes length,

    typically through a sliding mechanism.procedural surface : Surfaces for graphics modeling defined implicitly,such as by sweeping a curve or solid through space or by intersectingsimpler surfaces or solids.process n. : A program while being executed, usually as one of several ina multiprogramming envirorunent.processor n. : Any hardware device capable of executing a sequence ofpredefined operations on digital data.product specification : A document designed to describe all the features' planned for a product as independently as possible from the means used to implement them

    . product team : Collection of representatives from various organizations; ' ; ~ ~ that meets to coordinate the introduction of a new product;

    ~ , ' . . includes representatives from the project, diagnostics, reliability,+ packaging, etc., as specified in the NPI Procedure.Professional Graphics Adapter : - See PGA.Programmable Read-Only Memory: -See PROM.projection pipeline : The initial portion of the graphics pipeline, up toand including the transformation from three-dimensional worldcoordinates to two-dimensional screen coordinates.

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