|
Help With Computer Papers
Should This Business Update To Windows 2000 From Windows 98
... some advantages over Windows NT and Windows 98 doesn¡¦t mean everyone should try it. My purpose here is not to evaluate the software but to counsel caution before you undertake a major operating systems update. Even though Microsoft did a good job testing thousands of business applications, there are always rough spots in a transition. In fact, Microsoft has dedicated several Web pages to upgrade issues.
Once if you then decide to update, do it when you can devote time to the changeover. If you have multiple machines, make the change in stages running the old operating system during the transition.
First of a ...
|
Internet Regulation: Policing Cyberspace
... the
amendment. It is now being brought through the House of Representatives.1
The Internet is owned and operated by the government, which gives them the
obligation to restrict the materials available through it. Though it
appears to have sprung up overnight, the inspiration of free-spirited
hackers, it in fact was born in Defense Department Cold War projects of the
1950s.2 The United States Government owns the Internet and has the
responsibility to determine who uses it and how it is used. The government
must control what information is accessible from its agencies.
This material is not lawfully available throu ...
|
Morality And Ethics And Computers
... employees' work on computers? If so, should employees be
warned beforehand? If warned, does that make the practice okay? According to
Kenneth Goodman, director of the Forum for Bioethics and Philosophy at the
University of Miami, who teaches courses in computer ethics, "There's hardly a
business that's not using computers."1 This makes these questions all the more
important for today's society to answer.
There are also many moral and ethical problems dealing with the use of
computers in the medical field. In one particular case, a technician trusted
what he thought a computer was telling him, and admini ...
|
Computer Systems Analyst
... a living in these areas of interest? And finally: Do I enjoy the
different activities within this area of interest? From the first day that I
started my first computer, I have grasped the concepts quickly and with ease.
But the computer as well as I will never stop growing. I have introduced myself
to all topics of word processing to surfing the web. After reviewing a number
of resources, I have noticed a relatively high demand for technologically
integrated hardware and software positions available with companies that wish to
compete with the demand for “networking”. (“Computer Scientists” 95) Th ...
|
Computing Machinery And Intelligence
... would serve to draw a “fairly sharp line between the physical and the intellectual capacities of man”(p.444). Turing explains that the “idea behind digital computers…these machines are intended to carry out any operation which could be done by a human computer”(p.436). In effect, these machines are supposed to imitate the things a human being can do. For example, a computer learns how to receive, analyze and store information. These abilities are based on those of a human, the computer only generates information, without the authority to change the process in which it functions. The computer is on ...
|
Government Censorship Would Damage The Atmosphere Of The Freedom To Express Ideas On The Internet; Therefore, Government Should Not Encourage Censorship
... term that is often used is electronic news (enews/Usenet), enews
is a broadcast, free to the Internet medium.
3. The term FTP is also frequently used. File transfer protocol (FTP)
started as an Internet archival and retrieval medium, somewhat analogous to
traditional libraries.
4. The world-wide web (WWW), which is another component of the Net, can be
used to "publish" material that would traditionally appear in journals,
magazines, posters, books, television and even on film.
2. It is also essential to give a brief history on the internet.
3.The U.S. government is now trying to pass bills to prevent misuse of ...
|
The Origins Of The Computer
... unheard of courts, theaters, circuses, and public baths.
And these were now large permanent masonry buildings as were the habitations,
tall apartment houses covering whole city blocks.
This architectural revolution brought about by the Romans required two
innovations: the invention of a new building method called concrete vaulting and
the organization of labor and capital on a large scale so that huge projects
could be executed quickly after the plans of a single master architect.
Roman concrete was a fluid mixture of lime and small stones poured into
the hollow centers of walls faced with brick or stone ...
|
The Public Broadcasting System: Digital Technology And HDTV
... Public
Broadcast System's dedication to a high-definition television adjustment
present the educational station with an infinite collection of benefits
that will have numerous positive implications for the station's continuing
role as entertainer and educator. Furthermore, high-definition television
(HDTV) will
significantly enhance the beauty and complexity of all PBS's programming.
Founded in 1969, The Public Broadcasting System is America's sole
television network of public stations. Collectively, educational
establishments, community organizations or state and municipal groups,
operate approximately 35 ...
|
Agricultural Technological Advancements
... biological, chemical geological and physical characteristics of the soils of the world, as well as the management of soils to produce food and protect the environment.
Hydroponics from the Latin 'water working', is simply growing plants without soil.
Hydroponics is as old as the Hanging Gardens of Babylon. Today this technology is widely used to grow lush, healthy indoor plants and premium grade vegetables, fruits and herbs. The physiological requirements of plants can be met without the use of soil or natural sunlight. Plants are rooted (and thus supported) in an inert medium and nutrition is provided by water sol ...
|
Airships
... aircraft with propulsion and steering
systems, it is used to carry passengers and cargo. It obtains its buoyancy
from the presence of a lighter-than-air gas such as hydrogen or helium. The
first airship was developed by the French, called a ballon dirigible, it could
be steered and could also be flown against the wind.
TYPES OF AIRSHIP
Two basic types of airship have been developed: the rigid airship, the shape of
which is fixed by its internal structure; and the nonrigid blimp, which depends
on the pressure created by a series of air diaphragms inside its gas space to
maintain the shape of its fabric hu ...
|
Browse:
« prev
57
58
59
60
61
next »
|
|