Dictionary of new words

ALTTAB

Alt-Tab: translation

v.
To switch from one running computer program to another. (From the Alt-Tab key combination that cycles through running programs in Windows.)
Example Citations:
On a recent morning I was toiling away, when my PC began talking — not something I normally expect when I'm working in Microsoft Excel. I heard voices, then music. IAlt-Tabbedthrough my running apps until I came to the AIM client with my active buddy list. Running in the top of the window was a roughly 240-by-120 video of the trailer for a new Ben Affleck movie.
— Lance Ulanoff, "Why AIM Will Eventually Fail,"PC Magazine, January 14, 2004
You know the feeling.You're typing along, and all of a sudden you have to look something up. Most word processors these days have adequate (even good) spell-checking dictionaries and thesauri. But if you need an encyclopedia or an atlas — or anything else that isn't built into the program itself, for that matter — switching over can be tedious at best. By the time you'veAlt-Tabbedout to Program Manager, found the right icon, and brought that trusty multimedia encyclopedia to life, there's a 50-50 chance you've forgotten what you wanted to look up in the first place.
— Woody Leonhard, Vincent Chen, "The well-tempered CD clavier variations,"PC-Computing, September, 1994
Earliest Citation:
IfAlt-Tabbingbetween programs produces hard disc activity, you may need to add one or two more megabytes or not load so many programs at once.
— Jack Schofield, "Window on a world of PC possibilities,"The Guardian(London, England), April 23, 1992
Related Words:
Ctrl-Alt-Delete
Wintel
Categories:
Hardware
Programming and Software
Verbed Nouns