COMPUTER
Computers are found in practically every household today. Everywhere
you look, people have access to a Personal Computer, someway or another.
As computers get more advanced, the demand for a better computer gets
greater.
Personal Computer (PC), machine capable of repetitively and quickly
performing calculations and instructions. Designed to be used by a
single person, a PC is smaller, less expensive, and easier to use than
other classes of computers, such as supercomputers, mainframe computers,
and workstations. However, it usually has less computational power.1
First appearing as massive machines seen only in areas of high
technology, the computer eventually found its way into homes and offices
in
the smaller, more accessible form of the PC. They have revolutionized
entertainment, science, the media, art, medicine, education, and
business
because they provide computational abilities at a low cost to people
with no
programming experience. PCs enable artists to envision and manipulate
images. Musicians use them for learning, creating, and recording music.
Businesses track finances and forecast company performance using PCs.
Foreign correspondents can compose news stories on portable PCs, called
laptops, and electronically submit these stories from remote locations.
Many
people work at home and communicate with fellow workers via their PCs in
a
practice known as telecommunications. PCs are also able to interface
with
worldwide communication networks, such as the Internet, and the
graphics-
based information database known as the World Wide Web to find
information
on any subject. With a PC and a modem, a user is able to connect to
information on local, national, and international networks via phone
lines.
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