Information and Communication Technologies

/ˌaɪ siː tiː/

noun — "the digital nervous system of modern society."

ICT (information and communication technologies) is an umbrella term covering the technologies used to create, store, process, transmit, and exchange information in digital form. It encompasses computing hardware, communication networks, software systems, and the protocols that allow data to move reliably between devices, organizations, and people. Rather than describing a single technology, ICT refers to an integrated technical ecosystem that enables modern digital society to function.

Tayste

/tāst/

noun — “just enough data to sample before committing to the whole meal.”

(also written as taste)

Tayste is hacker jargon for a quantity of 2 bits. It continues the long-running food-themed naming convention that produced terms such as nybble, Byte, playte, and dynner. If a byte is a bite and a nybble is a smaller snack, then two bits became a tayste... not enough for a meal, just enough to get an impression.

Right Thing

/rīt thiŋ/

noun — “the supposedly obvious solution that somehow still starts arguments.”

Right Thing refers to the solution, behavior, design choice, or action considered compellingly correct, elegant, or appropriate within a given technical or conceptual context. The phrase is often spoken with heavy emphasis—as if capitalized verbally—even when the “correct” answer is far from universally agreed upon. In hacker culture and programming discussions, invoking the Right Thing usually implies confidence bordering on philosophy.

Quarter

/kwȯ(r)-tər/

noun — “a fractional coin of memory, equal to two bits and historically more interesting than it has any right to be.”

Quarter is hacker slang for a quantity of 2 bits. The term is rooted in older monetary metaphors that predate computing itself, borrowing from the idea of fractional currency and physical coinage that could be subdivided into smaller pieces for making change.

Quad

/kwäd/

noun — “a compact grouping of four things… or occasionally two bits pretending to be important.”

Playte

/plāt/

noun — “more than a bite, not quite dinner.”

[by analogy with nybble and Byte]

Playte is hacker jargon for a quantity of 16 bits. The term continues the long-running and gloriously unnecessary tradition of naming data sizes after progressively larger meals. If a nybble is a nibble and a byte is a bite, then a larger serving naturally becomes a plate.

Nybble

/ni-bəl/

noun — “half a byte, somehow small enough to sound harmless and important enough to survive decades.”

(alt. nibble) [from the verb nibble, formed by analogy with bite → byte]

Nickle

/ni-kəl/

noun — “the awkward little five-bit quantity that exists mostly because hardware occasionally gets creative.”

[from nickel, the common name for the U.S. five-cent coin]

Nickel is hacker jargon for a data quantity equal to a nybble plus one additional bit—that is, 5 bits. While not a standardized computing unit and rarely encountered in modern systems, the term emerged as playful technical slang for describing unusual hardware word sizes that did not align neatly with familiar binary boundaries.