486dx
Power PC
486sx
6340
B. Power PC
Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code
Extended Bit Code Decimal Interchange Code
Extended Bit Case Decimal Interchange Code
Extended Binary Case Decimal Interchange Code
IBM PCs
Apple/Macintosh PCs
IBM Compatibles
Both A & C
1984
1989
1988
1990
Consumers
Workers
Foremen
Managers
Stores data in the memory
Accepts input data from keyboard
Performs arithmetic/logic function
None of above
Binary digits
bit of system
a part of byte
All of above
Mnemonics
Bar code
Decoder
All of the above
Field
Words
Information
File
kilobyte
petabyte
terabyte
gigabyte
Analog computer
Digital computer
Hybrid computer
Mainframe computer
Hard is referred to mean something temporary
Hard is used to mean something tangible
Soft is used to mean something permanent
Soft is used to mean something tangible
Modem
Digitizer
Mouse
Light pen
256 different characters
512 different characters
1024 different characters
128 different characters
Super computer is much larger than mainframe computers
Super computers are much smaller than mainframe computers
Supercomputers are focused to execute as many programs as possible while mainframe uses its power to execute few programs as fast as possible.
Supercomputers are focused to execute few programs as fast as possible while mainframe uses its power to execute as many programs concurrently
None of above
Both of above
Sequential access
Direct access
John Napier
William Oughtred
Gottfried Leibnitz
Blaise Pascal
robotics
simulation
computer forensics
animation
Mainframe Computer
Mini Computers
Micro Computers
None of above
Switched mode Power Supply
Start mode power supply
Store mode power supply
Single mode power supply
2 pair
3 pair
4 pair
5 pair
PDP-I, 1958
IBM System/36, 1960
PDP-II, 1961
VAX 11/780, 1962
More expensive
More portable
Less rigid
Slowly accessed
Console-operator
Programmer
Peopleware
System Analyst
Time-related bomb sequence.
Virus.
Time bomb.
Trojan horse.
CISC
RISC
CD-ROM
Wi-Fi
Console-operator
Programmer
Peopleware
System Analyst
First generation
Second generation
Third generation
Fourth generation
all have the same motive
break into other people's computers
may legally break into computers as long as they do not do any damage
are people who are allergic to computers
1617
1620
1642
1837
IBM PCs used RISC CPU designs
Macintosh used CISC CPU design
IBM used CISC CPU design
None of above is true