All About Gaming - By Sai Krishna A & Roopsai NSai Krishna A
Gaming Consoles & Its Emerging Technology, a presentation prepared by two students Sai Krishna A and Roopsai N of the under-grad college GRIET, Hyderabad. This presentation was initially prepared for a technical event called Pragnya 2018 in the section "Paper Presentations" and will further be used by the owners in the future.
*for educational & informative purposes only, any signs of copying/recreating/manipulating of this media is legally punishable.
Quiz conducted on 14th August 2020 as part of Birla Vidya Niketan's August Brilliance Event. Organised by CodeTech committee. Quizmasters Navan and Vinayak.
This lesson includes:
* First Generation of Computers
* Second Generation of Computers
* Third Generation of Computers
* Fourth Generation of Computers
* Fifth Generation of Computers
All About Gaming - By Sai Krishna A & Roopsai NSai Krishna A
Gaming Consoles & Its Emerging Technology, a presentation prepared by two students Sai Krishna A and Roopsai N of the under-grad college GRIET, Hyderabad. This presentation was initially prepared for a technical event called Pragnya 2018 in the section "Paper Presentations" and will further be used by the owners in the future.
*for educational & informative purposes only, any signs of copying/recreating/manipulating of this media is legally punishable.
Quiz conducted on 14th August 2020 as part of Birla Vidya Niketan's August Brilliance Event. Organised by CodeTech committee. Quizmasters Navan and Vinayak.
This lesson includes:
* First Generation of Computers
* Second Generation of Computers
* Third Generation of Computers
* Fourth Generation of Computers
* Fifth Generation of Computers
The meaning of “open source”; key issues common to most open source licenses; overview of the major open source licenses and and their impact in a corporate environment; potential risks associated with noncompliance
Links between Comprehensive Area Assessments and Local Economic Assessments, delivered by Suzi Coe (Regional Lead Economy and the Environment, Audit Commission)
Vernon Technology Solutions offers clients the ability to rent computers and electronics and save money. Make sure to also check out their computer recycling services.
My ISCA 2013 - 40th International Symposium on Computer Architecture KeynoteDileep Bhandarkar
Keynote speech delivered in Tel Aviv on 25 June 2013.
I had the privilege of being the first speaker at the First Annual Symposium on Computer Architecture in 1973. Over the last 40 years I have worked on PDP-11, VAX, MIPS, Alpha, x86, Itanium, and ARM processors and systems.
Moore’s Law has enabled computer architects to increase the pace of innovation and the development of microprocessors with new instruction sets.
In the 1970s, minicomputers from Digital Equipment Corporation, Data General and Hewlett Packard started to challenge IBM mainframes. The introduction of the 32-bit VAX-11/780 in 1978 was a landmark event. The single chip MicroVAX was introduced in 1985.
The IBM PC was introduced on August 12, 1981, followed by many IBM PC compatible machines from Compaq and others. This led to the tremendous growth of x86 processors from Intel and AMD. Today, the x86 processor dominate the computer industry.
In 1987, the introduction of RISC processors based on Sun’s SPARC architecture spawned the now famous RISC vs CISC debates. RISC processors from MIPS, IBM (Power, Power PC), and HP (PA-RISC) started to gain market share. This forced Digital to first adopt MIPS processors, and later introduce Alpha in 1992.
The RISC supremacy continued until the introduction of the first out of order x86 Pentium Pro processor in 1995, expanding the role of x86 into workstations and servers. The x86 architecture was extended to 64 bits by AMD in the Opteron processor in 2003, forcing Intel to launch its own compatible processor.
Disruptive technologies usually come from below. We have seen users migrate from mainframes to minicomputers to RISC workstations and servers to desktop PCs and PC servers to notebooks and tablets. Volume economics has driven the industry. The next wave will be the technology used in smart phones. With over a billion chips sold annually, this technology will appear in other platforms. Several companies have announced plans for ARM based servers.
Moore’s Law has also enabled computer architects to advance the sophistication of microprocessors. We will review some of the significant milestones leading from the first Intel 4004 to today’s state of the art processors.
This is the notes for the Module CT1101 - Computer Technology, a first year module taught in Bachelors of Media Technology (Shepherd College, Purbanchal University)
1. MyThoughtsafter 50 Years Never trust anything that can think for itself if you can't see where it keeps its brain. J. K. Rowling, Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets, 1999 Change your thoughts and you change your world. Norman Vincent Peale
19. The term "microcomputer" first appears in print, in reference to the Micral.Gary Kildall writes a simple operating system in his PL/M language, called CP/M.
301. Intel releases the Pentium II 300, 333, 400, 450, and faster processors to the market.
302.
303. The growth of browser usage, running on the HTML language, changed the way in which information-display and retrieval was organized.
304. The widespread network connections led to the growth and prevention of international computer viruses on MS Windows computers, and the vast proliferation of spam e-mail became a major design issue in e-mail systems, flooding communication channels and requiring semi-automated pre-screening.
305.
306. WWW is now the new reality, newsprint and books are on the way out.
309. Official Launch of Windows 2000 - Microsoft's replacement for Windows 95/98 and Windows NT. Claimed to be faster and more reliable than previous versions of Windows. It is actually a descendant of the NT series, and so the trade-off for increased reliability is that it won't run some old DOS-based games.
310. To keep the home market happy Microsoft has also released Windows ME, the newest member of the 95/98 series.
314. The New Role of IT Technical expertise is only one of the talents required to be successful in the new IT IT as a profession will decline in importance unless it re-invents itself. IT will become either a service (water, or electric company) model or a leader of collaboration and re-engineering We will see a “digital battleground” evolve quickly with “digital terrorists” soon to follow.
315. Other Changes 2020+ Copyright, patents and intellectual property rights will change radically or will be swept away. Workplace roles will change radically, just as the “secretary” and dictation are almost gone. The LinkedIn type paradigm will promote ad hoc teams of “experts” to tackle issues.
316. More Changes Connectivity will be a non-issue as the WWW will move to new technology and/or structure or it will be replaced and WIFI will be ubiquitous. Quantum and organic devices will make today’s fastest technology look like a Conestoga wagon. We will have a new unified theory of physics and time altering technology will become the new frontier
317. Flexible and embedded technology will become as common as gene manipulation and genetic engineering. The StarTrek inspiration will be replaced by a new inspiration for today’s children(Avatar?). Closed societies will wither but social, and religious groups will struggle to influence the societal changes and conflicts will deepen as we become more “electronically connected”.
318. 3D displays, virtual keyboards, gesture reading appliances, self healing technology, and embedded intelligence will begin to redefine our societies with everyone within reach electronically. “Professional interaction engineering applications” will be the new game changer. Technology will be less visible and more enabling.
319. Every individual will have a “one point of contact” like a single telephone number (Google) of today. Privacy issues and control issues will take years to settle. Big brick and mortar businesses will change or go under. The web and UPS! Education will become a way of life not just 4 year degrees and advanced degrees.
320. Other’s thoughts Some more thoughts; “brick and mortar going down, toll booths being COMPLETELY automated and tied to the state database of car registry so it charges you by car, check out lines at stores being automated and linked to bank accounts with RFID on products, RFID tags on kids backpacks so when they arrive at school roll is taken and if your kid isn't there the parents are notified, GPS reporting in most all devices. Most of these things I believe to be not even that far off.” Your thoughts????