rdfs:comment
| - A head-up display or heads-up display (also known as a HUD) is any transparent display that presents data without requiring users to look away from their usual viewpoints. The origin of the name stems from a pilot being able to view information with the head positioned "up" and looking forward, instead of angled down looking at lower instruments.
- User can create or see a head-up display containing information about the world around them, allowing them to perceive data without requiring user to look away from their usual viewpoints.
- A head-up display, or HUD, is any transparent display that presents data without requiring the user to look away from his or her usual viewpoint. The origin of the name stems from the user being able to view information with their head "up" and looking forward, instead of angled down looking at lower instruments. Although they were initially developed for military aviation, HUDs are now used in commercial aircraft, automobiles, and other applications.
- Head-Up Display (HUD) is an interface that shows you content, such as your squad, without having to use go use the menu. The HUD consists of a few things: warnings, information, kill feed, health, a mini map, vehicle status, ammo, and other things. You can centralize the HUD, which will move some contents. This is not to be confused with the Death Screen which appears only after the players death.
- 250px|right|thumb|A Pocsolyaugró HUD-ja A HUD (Head-up display, fejmagasságú kijelző) a repülőgép vagy egyéb eszköz műszerfalának tetejére szerelt, átlátszó kijelző, amely az alapvető adatokat jeleníti meg, miközben, rajta átnézve, a pilóta előre kilát a repülőgépből.
- The head-up display, or HUD, is a system for a quick view of important information for the user. It appears as multiple tabs around the view in-game player.
- The Head's Up Display (commonly HUD) is a very important feature included in every Ace Combat game to date. Formats and general position of the HUD vary and are tweaked throughout the whole series, though most commonly include:
- Terminator visual displays and HUD's are usually monochromatic. T-800, T-850, and T-888 units all have a largely red HUD, this is because of the infrared mode that is used to save energy. The T-X has a blue HUD with blue/white, red, and black lettering. As shown from the T-850 PoV in Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, the HUD of a Terminator under the influence of the T-X had its HUD changed to the blue T-X version, with the struggle for program dominance "shown" internally by switching back and forth between the default and intruder colors. The color of the PoV HUD does NOT indicate the color of the Terminator's unshielded (not flesh covered) eyes as seen from the outside.
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abstract
| - A head-up display or heads-up display (also known as a HUD) is any transparent display that presents data without requiring users to look away from their usual viewpoints. The origin of the name stems from a pilot being able to view information with the head positioned "up" and looking forward, instead of angled down looking at lower instruments.
- User can create or see a head-up display containing information about the world around them, allowing them to perceive data without requiring user to look away from their usual viewpoints.
- A head-up display, or HUD, is any transparent display that presents data without requiring the user to look away from his or her usual viewpoint. The origin of the name stems from the user being able to view information with their head "up" and looking forward, instead of angled down looking at lower instruments. Although they were initially developed for military aviation, HUDs are now used in commercial aircraft, automobiles, and other applications.
- The Head's Up Display (commonly HUD) is a very important feature included in every Ace Combat game to date. Formats and general position of the HUD vary and are tweaked throughout the whole series, though most commonly include:
* Ammo counts of the ship's remaining ammo
* Damage, a general scale of the current condition of the ship
* Speed, in MPH. Can be changed to KPH via the options menu
* Alt., in feet (can be changed to meters via options)
* Score, current point score.
* Time, amount of time remaining to complete mission (if time is up, mission failed)
* Wingman Command, in the games it appears in
* Radar, shows where the player and other aircraft and targets are in the combat area
- Head-Up Display (HUD) is an interface that shows you content, such as your squad, without having to use go use the menu. The HUD consists of a few things: warnings, information, kill feed, health, a mini map, vehicle status, ammo, and other things. You can centralize the HUD, which will move some contents. This is not to be confused with the Death Screen which appears only after the players death.
- 250px|right|thumb|A Pocsolyaugró HUD-ja A HUD (Head-up display, fejmagasságú kijelző) a repülőgép vagy egyéb eszköz műszerfalának tetejére szerelt, átlátszó kijelző, amely az alapvető adatokat jeleníti meg, miközben, rajta átnézve, a pilóta előre kilát a repülőgépből.
- The head-up display, or HUD, is a system for a quick view of important information for the user. It appears as multiple tabs around the view in-game player.
- Terminator visual displays and HUD's are usually monochromatic. T-800, T-850, and T-888 units all have a largely red HUD, this is because of the infrared mode that is used to save energy. The T-X has a blue HUD with blue/white, red, and black lettering. As shown from the T-850 PoV in Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, the HUD of a Terminator under the influence of the T-X had its HUD changed to the blue T-X version, with the struggle for program dominance "shown" internally by switching back and forth between the default and intruder colors. The color of the PoV HUD does NOT indicate the color of the Terminator's unshielded (not flesh covered) eyes as seen from the outside. Cameron Phillips, a T-900, has a full color visual display and HUD Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles pilot episode "The Demon Hand" "Samson & Delilah" capable of switching through several modes of display, including deep thermal scan. For both Cameron, and other Series 888 Terminators, such as Vick Chamberlain, the HUD is displayed while fully functional. When the CPU is not fully online, as when during the course of a reboot from massive damage or when a CPU's contents are being reviewed in a low-power setting, there is no HUD present, and all visual records are presented in a grainy, raw-video format. This differs from an active Terminator's access of stored video files for analysis. However, the HUD is definitely a function of the operating system hardwired into the CPU, as demonstrated when John Connor's own computer and webcam begins displaying the Terminator HUD after the CPU is given too much power, and the unit seizes control of the equipment it is plugged into. "Vick's Chip"
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