Summary
Swedish to English:   more detail...
  1. ACK:
  2. Wiktionary:
English to Swedish:   more detail...
  1. ACK:


Swedish

Detailed Translations for ack from Swedish to English

ACK:

ACK

  1. ACK (bekräftelse)
    the acknowledgement; the ACK
    – A message transmitted to indicate that data has been received correctly. The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) requires that the recipient acknowledge successful receipt of data. Such acknowledgments (ACKs) generate additional network traffic, decreasing the rate at which data passes but increasing reliability. To reduce the impact on performance, most hosts send an acknowledgment for every other segment or when a specified time interval has passed. 1

Translation Matrix for ACK:

NounRelated TranslationsOther Translations
ACK ACK; bekräftelse
acknowledgement ACK; bekräftelse erkännande; erkänsla; tack; tack brev; tacksägelse; uppskattning; överenskommelse


Wiktionary Translations for ack:

ack
interjection
  1. exclamation of sorrow, etc.

Cross Translation:
FromToVia
ack oh; oh, I see; you don’t, say; oh no!; oh no, of course not ach — (kurz, ansteigend) drückt Verwunderung aus



English

Detailed Translations for ack from English to Swedish

ACK:

ACK [the ~] nom

  1. the ACK (acknowledgement)
    – A message transmitted to indicate that data has been received correctly. The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) requires that the recipient acknowledge successful receipt of data. Such acknowledgments (ACKs) generate additional network traffic, decreasing the rate at which data passes but increasing reliability. To reduce the impact on performance, most hosts send an acknowledgment for every other segment or when a specified time interval has passed. 1

Translation Matrix for ACK:

NounRelated TranslationsOther Translations
bekräftelse ACK; acknowledgement affirmation; audit; confirmation; installation; placement; positioning; verification
Not SpecifiedRelated TranslationsOther Translations
ACK ACK; acknowledgement

Related Definitions for "ACK":

  1. A message transmitted to indicate that data has been received correctly. The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) requires that the recipient acknowledge successful receipt of data. Such acknowledgments (ACKs) generate additional network traffic, decreasing the rate at which data passes but increasing reliability. To reduce the impact on performance, most hosts send an acknowledgment for every other segment or when a specified time interval has passed.1