log to• If you have a modem you can log on to a bulletinboard and download it.• The message contains an authentication token that allows users to log on to network services.• Using a scriptcommand, the user is automatically logged on to the appropriatehost once an application is chosen.• In San Francisco about 100 people, many of them reporters, have asked to log on to the list.• Each user has a unique username and a password which must be used in order to log on to the network.• The result has been that customers are often unable to log on to the system.• Members are invited to log on to their computers and call up the Heisei menu.
5.log off/outphrasal verbphr vTDto stop using a computer system by giving it particular instructions 登出,退出〔计算机系统〕
log• Khader works full time now at nation-building, sometimeslogging 16 hours of work in a day.• All deliveries must be logged.• When logged into his two-waycommunication system, you will be amazed at his love and understanding.• But for some countries trade in the wood is of directbenefit to the local people who log it.• At the time she was logged on at another computer in the station, working on an applicationform.• As more people log on, they experiencefrustratingdelays.• By mid-July the INS had logged only 72 applications.• The pilot had logged over 150 hours of flying time.• Of these, loggingposes by far the most seriousthreat.• The system can log the date and length of calls made by company employees.• Workers routinely logged twelve-hour days, and are doing so once again.
From Longman Business Dictionary
loglog1 /lɒglɒːg, lɑːg/ verb (past tensepst and past participlepplogged, present participle logging) [transitiveT]
1to make a record of each time that something happens
The new system logs every call that a customer makes to the company.