Generator in a sentence as a noun

Yep -- Backbone doesn't include a file generator.

The main features of one of their web based software products was a report generator.

Instead, a diesel generator near the town might need to be turned on, which can be very expensive.

Thus if NSA knows all about RdRand then the effect would be to downgrade the random number generator to the situation before RdRand was used at all.

The gas generator cycle, as the article mentions, dumps this turbine exhaust overboard separately.

Then we have the dismissive password generator users, followed by the complaint that this is an irrelevant solution.

It's easy for Colin to rely on the resilience of "modern" 2010's-era crypto when all he has to consider is AES-CTR, a random number generator, and SHA3.

I, too, have a random number generator that I am willing to part with on very reasonable terms, cash/equity split negotiable.

All EC2 instances and EBS volumes successfully transferred to back-up generator power.

The batteries at colocation facilities are only designed to hold power long enough to transfer to the generator.

This is hard if you don't know the standard techniques: mostly recursive descent parsing with precedence -- or a parser generator, but that won't teach you much unless you write the generator yourself.

How do I set up my servers properly so that if one circuit/PDU/generator fails, I don't lose power?There is a "right way" to do this--multiple power supplies in every server connected to 2 PDUs connected to 2 different generators--but it's expensive, and many/most low-end hosting providers won't set this up due to the cost.

Generator definitions

noun

an apparatus that produces a vapor or gas

noun

engine that converts mechanical energy into electrical energy by electromagnetic induction

noun

someone who originates or causes or initiates something; "he was the generator of several complaints"

See also: source author

noun

an electronic device for producing a signal voltage