The document describes an E-Ball, which is a spherical computer that is only 6 inches in diameter. It has a 120x120mm motherboard inside and contains elements like a wireless optical mouse, laser keyboard, LCD projector, 350-600GB hard drive, 5GB RAM, and speakers. The E-Ball works using infrared rays and lasers for the keyboard and an RF receiver and transmitter for the mouse. It is portable but has a high cost. Special operating systems are required to work on the unique spherical shape and troubleshooting hardware issues could be difficult.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept designed by Apostol Tnokovski. The E-Ball would be the smallest computer yet, at only 6 inches in diameter. It contains all the components of a traditional computer, like a keyboard, mouse, DVD recorder and large screen display, within its spherical form factor. The screen and input devices are accessed through innovative mechanisms, like a laser keyboard and projector that displays the screen on a wall or paper sheet. The E-Ball aims to offer power and functionality comparable to a traditional computer, despite its compact spherical size.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer that is the smallest PC design. Measuring 160mm in diameter, the E-Ball contains all the components of a traditional computer, including a motherboard, hard drive, web cam, and more. It has a wireless optical mouse, virtual keyboard, LCD projector, 350-600GB hard drive, and is powered by pressing buttons on the sides. While portable and high performance, it also has high costs and potential difficulties with hardware issues. The E-Ball represents how computer technology is pushing boundaries to create increasingly compact devices.
This document presents the concept of the E-Ball, the smallest PC designed by Apostol Tnokovski in 1982. The E-Ball is a spherical computer around 6 inches in diameter that contains components like a dual-core processor, RAM, hard drive and ports. It projects its display and virtual keyboard using an embedded pico projector. The E-Ball is portable and allows presentations without needing an external display or keyboard. While innovative, it also has drawbacks like needing a plane surface for projection and typing.
The E-Ball is a concept for a spherical computer that is smaller than any laptop or desktop. It would contain all the standard components like a keyboard, mouse, and screen in a 160mm round sphere. The E-Ball would have a virtual keyboard, 2GB RAM, 350-500GB hard drive, integrated graphics and sound, speakers, wireless mouse, and connectivity options. It projects a holographic keyboard and is designed to work with other devices running Windows OS, though its cost would limit users to other than normal consumers.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical personal computer that is 160mm in diameter. Key features include a virtual keyboard, dual core processor, 2GB RAM, integrated graphics and sound card, speakers, wireless optical mouse, and an LCD projector. The projector can display the computer screen on a wall or paper sheet holder. While innovative, the E-Ball has some disadvantages like incompatibility with normal operating systems and very high cost.
The document describes the E-Ball concept PC, a spherical computer that is the smallest computer design. It has a dual core processor, 2GB of RAM, 350-500GB hard drive, integrated graphics and sound card, wireless optical mouse, and projects a holographic keyboard. The E-Ball is highly portable, has a large memory capacity, and can be used for making presentations on the go. It represents how technology has allowed imaginations to become reality by fitting an entire computer into a small spherical design.
The E-Ball is a spherical computer measuring 160mm in diameter that contains all the components of a traditional computer, such as a motherboard, hard drive, and optical drive. It projects a virtual keyboard and screen onto any flat surface using an infrared light and sensor. Some key features include 350-600GB of storage, 5GB of RAM, and dual core processing. The E-Ball opens by pressing buttons on the sides and works by projecting the keyboard and screen, then using wireless peripherals. While small and portable, it also comes with some disadvantages like potential issues with the projected display.
The document describes an E-Ball, which is a spherical computer that is only 6 inches in diameter. It has a 120x120mm motherboard inside and contains elements like a wireless optical mouse, laser keyboard, LCD projector, 350-600GB hard drive, 5GB RAM, and speakers. The E-Ball works using infrared rays and lasers for the keyboard and an RF receiver and transmitter for the mouse. It is portable but has a high cost. Special operating systems are required to work on the unique spherical shape and troubleshooting hardware issues could be difficult.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept designed by Apostol Tnokovski. The E-Ball would be the smallest computer yet, at only 6 inches in diameter. It contains all the components of a traditional computer, like a keyboard, mouse, DVD recorder and large screen display, within its spherical form factor. The screen and input devices are accessed through innovative mechanisms, like a laser keyboard and projector that displays the screen on a wall or paper sheet. The E-Ball aims to offer power and functionality comparable to a traditional computer, despite its compact spherical size.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer that is the smallest PC design. Measuring 160mm in diameter, the E-Ball contains all the components of a traditional computer, including a motherboard, hard drive, web cam, and more. It has a wireless optical mouse, virtual keyboard, LCD projector, 350-600GB hard drive, and is powered by pressing buttons on the sides. While portable and high performance, it also has high costs and potential difficulties with hardware issues. The E-Ball represents how computer technology is pushing boundaries to create increasingly compact devices.
This document presents the concept of the E-Ball, the smallest PC designed by Apostol Tnokovski in 1982. The E-Ball is a spherical computer around 6 inches in diameter that contains components like a dual-core processor, RAM, hard drive and ports. It projects its display and virtual keyboard using an embedded pico projector. The E-Ball is portable and allows presentations without needing an external display or keyboard. While innovative, it also has drawbacks like needing a plane surface for projection and typing.
The E-Ball is a concept for a spherical computer that is smaller than any laptop or desktop. It would contain all the standard components like a keyboard, mouse, and screen in a 160mm round sphere. The E-Ball would have a virtual keyboard, 2GB RAM, 350-500GB hard drive, integrated graphics and sound, speakers, wireless mouse, and connectivity options. It projects a holographic keyboard and is designed to work with other devices running Windows OS, though its cost would limit users to other than normal consumers.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical personal computer that is 160mm in diameter. Key features include a virtual keyboard, dual core processor, 2GB RAM, integrated graphics and sound card, speakers, wireless optical mouse, and an LCD projector. The projector can display the computer screen on a wall or paper sheet holder. While innovative, the E-Ball has some disadvantages like incompatibility with normal operating systems and very high cost.
The document describes the E-Ball concept PC, a spherical computer that is the smallest computer design. It has a dual core processor, 2GB of RAM, 350-500GB hard drive, integrated graphics and sound card, wireless optical mouse, and projects a holographic keyboard. The E-Ball is highly portable, has a large memory capacity, and can be used for making presentations on the go. It represents how technology has allowed imaginations to become reality by fitting an entire computer into a small spherical design.
The E-Ball is a spherical computer measuring 160mm in diameter that contains all the components of a traditional computer, such as a motherboard, hard drive, and optical drive. It projects a virtual keyboard and screen onto any flat surface using an infrared light and sensor. Some key features include 350-600GB of storage, 5GB of RAM, and dual core processing. The E-Ball opens by pressing buttons on the sides and works by projecting the keyboard and screen, then using wireless peripherals. While small and portable, it also comes with some disadvantages like potential issues with the projected display.
The document describes the E-Ball concept PC, a spherical computer designed by Apostol Tnokovski. The E-Ball has a 6-inch diameter and projects a keyboard and display using an LCD or DLP projector. It contains components like a virtual keyboard, wireless mouse, speakers and processors. The E-Ball works by pressing buttons to open it and then projecting the keyboard and display on any flat surface. While portable and space-efficient, it also has drawbacks like high cost, difficulty of use without a flat surface, and problems of troubleshooting hardware issues.
This document describes the E-Ball concept PC, a spherical computer that is smaller than laptops and desktops. The E-Ball has a 6-inch diameter sphere size and contains components like a 120x120mm motherboard, wireless optical mouse, laser keyboard, 350-600GB hard drive, 5GB RAM, two 50W speakers, ports and a built-in LCD projector. It can project the desktop interface onto a wall or paper sheet when its projector is activated. The document discusses the projector technologies used, virtual keyboard functionality, advantages like portability, and disadvantages such as high cost.
The E-Ball concept pc is a sphere shaped pc which is the smallest design among all the laptops and desktops.
This concept PC will measure 160mm in diameter and it was designed for Microsoft Windows OS.
This computer has all the features like a traditional computer, like, mouse, dvd, large screen display, mother-board, hard
drive, web came ,modem, LAN& WAN slots etc.
This document discusses the E-Ball, a spherical computer created by Macedonian designer Apostol Tnokovski. The E-Ball aims to be the smallest computer ever created, fitting all the components of a traditional PC into a 6-inch sphere. It has features like a holographic display, optical mouse, laser keyboard, hard drive, RAM, speakers, ports and a dual-core processor. The E-Ball works by opening its stands and projecting its display onto walls or paper sheets. While portable and powerful, its high cost and incompatibility with normal operating systems are limitations. The document concludes the E-Ball could revolutionize computing by drastically reducing computer size.
The document describes E-Ball, a spherical computer measuring 160mm in diameter that contains all the components of a traditional computer. E-Ball uses an LCD projector to project a virtual keyboard and display onto any flat surface. It has features like a wireless mouse, large storage, RAM and processors. To use it, the user presses the power button to open E-Ball and projects the keyboard and screen. E-Ball allows computing in small spaces and on the go. While portable and powerful, it also has high costs and potential hardware issues.
E-Ball is a spherical personal computer that is much smaller than traditional laptops and desktops. It has all the standard computer components like a keyboard, mouse, DVD drive, and large screen display integrated into a compact 6 inch diameter sphere using innovative design. The E-Ball was created by a Macedonian designer to be a revolutionary new form factor for personal computers, hiding all the components inside the sphere. It is designed to project its display onto a wall using an internal LCD projector, and includes a detachable laser keyboard and optical mouse.
The document summarizes the E-Ball, a spherical computer designed by Apostol Tnokovski. It has all the traditional PC elements like a mouse, keyboard, large screen display and DVD recorder compressed into a small 6-inch diameter sphere. The software interface is highly stylized with easy to remember icons that support all Windows operating systems. The E-Ball is portable and has a large memory, making it useful for video presentations.
The document describes the E-ball technology, which is a spherical personal computer that is the smallest PC design. It has a diameter of 160mm and contains components like a motherboard, hard drive, wireless keyboard and mouse, speakers, and an LCD projector to display the screen on walls or paper. The E-ball works by projecting a virtual keyboard onto any flat surface using infrared sensors to detect key presses. It allows users to access all standard PC functions in a highly portable device.
The document describes an E-Ball, a spherical computer with a 6-inch diameter. It has a 120x120mm motherboard, 5GB of RAM, 250-500GB of hard disk space, dual speakers, a dual-core processor, and integrated graphics and sound. The E-Ball has an intuitive icon-based interface that works well for presentations, media, and web browsing but only supports Windows. However, it also has some disadvantages like only working with Windows, high cost, difficulty troubleshooting hardware issues, and less memory and storage than other computers.
This document summarizes a seminar on the E-Ball technology. The E-Ball was designed by Apostol Tnokovski to be the smallest PC. It is a spherical computer that is 160mm in diameter. It contains all the components of a traditional computer, like a motherboard and hard drive, within its ball shape. It projects a virtual keyboard and uses a pico projector to display the screen on any flat surface. The E-Ball has advantages of portability and not needing an external display. However, it requires careful typing on the virtual keyboard and a plane surface to project the keyboard.
The document describes an E-Ball, a spherical computer designed by Apostol Tnokovski. It is small, with a diameter of only 6 inches and a 120x120mm motherboard. It contains wireless keyboards and mice that use infrared rays, lasers and RF signals. The E-Ball has large storage and memory, and can project its display onto surfaces using an LCD projector. While portable and useful for presentations, E-Balls have high costs and compatibility issues, and troubleshooting hardware is difficult.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept that is smaller than any laptop or desktop. It is 6 inches in diameter and contains components like a wireless optical mouse, laser keyboard, LCD projector, hard drive, RAM, and speakers. It works by using infrared rays and lasers for the keyboard and RF signals for the mouse. The document discusses the LCD and DLP projector technologies that could be used, as well as a virtual laser keyboard. It outlines the features and advantages of portability and large memory, but also disadvantages like high cost and difficulty of repairs.
This document proposes a concept for a spherical computer called the E-Ball. The E-Ball would be 160mm in diameter and contain all the components of a traditional desktop computer, including storage, RAM, processors and ports in a compact spherical design. It would project its keyboard and screen onto surfaces using built-in projectors. The E-Ball aims to make computers more portable while fitting all the necessary components into a small spherical shape unlike traditional rectangular computers. It would allow users to work on any flat surface and hide the entire computer when closed. The concept proposes advantages like portability, security and efficiency but also acknowledges challenges like high costs and difficulty supporting standard operating systems.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept measuring 160mm in diameter. It contains all the components of a traditional computer, including a motherboard, hard drive, wireless keyboard and mouse, speakers, and projector. The projector allows the user to project the computer's display onto any flat surface. It works by pressing buttons on the sides to open it and reveal the virtual keyboard and detachable mouse. While portable and space-efficient, the E-Ball also has drawbacks like high cost and difficulty of repairs. Overall, the E-Ball presents an innovative spherical design for miniaturizing the full computer into a small, portable ball-shaped device.
The document discusses the E-Ball, a spherical computer designed by Apostol Tnokopvski. The E-Ball is the smallest computer design at 160mm in diameter and runs on the Windows OS. It contains features like a mouse, DVD drive, large screen display, motherboard, hard drive, webcam, and more. It is designed to be placed on two stands and opened by pressing two buttons simultaneously. The E-Ball has a 350-600GB hard drive, 5GB RAM, dual core processor, integrated graphics and sound, and projects a virtual keyboard onto any flat surface. While portable and powerful, E-Balls are very expensive and operating systems may not be compatible.
The document describes the E-Ball, a concept for a spherical computer. Key aspects of the E-Ball include its small 6-inch diameter size, LCD projector for displaying content on walls or paper, and laser keyboard that projects onto surfaces. The E-Ball would contain standard computer components like a hard drive, RAM, and processor in a portable, sphere-shaped device for presentations or use when a traditional computer is not available or practical.
The document describes the E-ball, a spherical computer created by Apostol Tnokovski. The E-ball has all the components of a traditional computer, such as a motherboard and hard drive, fitted inside a small 6-inch diameter sphere. It projects its display and uses an optical virtual keyboard. The E-ball allows for activities like presentations, media viewing, and internet access from its portable design. While innovative, it also has drawbacks like high cost and difficulty supporting standard operating systems.
The document describes a spherical computer called the E-Ball. The E-Ball was designed by Apostol Tnokovski to be the smallest PC ever made in a spherical shape. It has a projected keyboard and display. The E-Ball has all the features of a traditional computer inside its 160mm round sphere and projects its screen onto walls or paper sheets using an internal projector. It contains components like a virtual keyboard, processor, RAM, hard drive and projector. The E-Ball allows for portable use and large screen presentations but has a very high cost and could be difficult to repair hardware issues.
It gives information regarding 6 different cyber attacks which most of the people become a victim of and which part of society is affected by which attack.
It explains how this attacks are done by hackers and explains ways to prevent them.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept. The E-Ball is a small 6-inch diameter sphere containing a 120x120mm motherboard. It has wireless keyboard and mouse, an LCD projector, 350-600GB hard drive, 5GB RAM, speakers, networking cards, and an optional paper sheet screen. While portable and powerful for presentations, the E-Ball has a high cost and potential difficulty with hardware repairs due to its compact size.
The E-Ball is a sphere shaped computer concept which is the smallest design among all the laptops and desktops have ever made. This PC concept features all the traditional elements like mouse, keyboard, large screen display, DVD recorder, etc, all in an innovative manner.
The document describes the E-Ball concept PC, a spherical computer designed by Apostol Tnokovski. The E-Ball has a 6-inch diameter and projects a keyboard and display using an LCD or DLP projector. It contains components like a virtual keyboard, wireless mouse, speakers and processors. The E-Ball works by pressing buttons to open it and then projecting the keyboard and display on any flat surface. While portable and space-efficient, it also has drawbacks like high cost, difficulty of use without a flat surface, and problems of troubleshooting hardware issues.
This document describes the E-Ball concept PC, a spherical computer that is smaller than laptops and desktops. The E-Ball has a 6-inch diameter sphere size and contains components like a 120x120mm motherboard, wireless optical mouse, laser keyboard, 350-600GB hard drive, 5GB RAM, two 50W speakers, ports and a built-in LCD projector. It can project the desktop interface onto a wall or paper sheet when its projector is activated. The document discusses the projector technologies used, virtual keyboard functionality, advantages like portability, and disadvantages such as high cost.
The E-Ball concept pc is a sphere shaped pc which is the smallest design among all the laptops and desktops.
This concept PC will measure 160mm in diameter and it was designed for Microsoft Windows OS.
This computer has all the features like a traditional computer, like, mouse, dvd, large screen display, mother-board, hard
drive, web came ,modem, LAN& WAN slots etc.
This document discusses the E-Ball, a spherical computer created by Macedonian designer Apostol Tnokovski. The E-Ball aims to be the smallest computer ever created, fitting all the components of a traditional PC into a 6-inch sphere. It has features like a holographic display, optical mouse, laser keyboard, hard drive, RAM, speakers, ports and a dual-core processor. The E-Ball works by opening its stands and projecting its display onto walls or paper sheets. While portable and powerful, its high cost and incompatibility with normal operating systems are limitations. The document concludes the E-Ball could revolutionize computing by drastically reducing computer size.
The document describes E-Ball, a spherical computer measuring 160mm in diameter that contains all the components of a traditional computer. E-Ball uses an LCD projector to project a virtual keyboard and display onto any flat surface. It has features like a wireless mouse, large storage, RAM and processors. To use it, the user presses the power button to open E-Ball and projects the keyboard and screen. E-Ball allows computing in small spaces and on the go. While portable and powerful, it also has high costs and potential hardware issues.
E-Ball is a spherical personal computer that is much smaller than traditional laptops and desktops. It has all the standard computer components like a keyboard, mouse, DVD drive, and large screen display integrated into a compact 6 inch diameter sphere using innovative design. The E-Ball was created by a Macedonian designer to be a revolutionary new form factor for personal computers, hiding all the components inside the sphere. It is designed to project its display onto a wall using an internal LCD projector, and includes a detachable laser keyboard and optical mouse.
The document summarizes the E-Ball, a spherical computer designed by Apostol Tnokovski. It has all the traditional PC elements like a mouse, keyboard, large screen display and DVD recorder compressed into a small 6-inch diameter sphere. The software interface is highly stylized with easy to remember icons that support all Windows operating systems. The E-Ball is portable and has a large memory, making it useful for video presentations.
The document describes the E-ball technology, which is a spherical personal computer that is the smallest PC design. It has a diameter of 160mm and contains components like a motherboard, hard drive, wireless keyboard and mouse, speakers, and an LCD projector to display the screen on walls or paper. The E-ball works by projecting a virtual keyboard onto any flat surface using infrared sensors to detect key presses. It allows users to access all standard PC functions in a highly portable device.
The document describes an E-Ball, a spherical computer with a 6-inch diameter. It has a 120x120mm motherboard, 5GB of RAM, 250-500GB of hard disk space, dual speakers, a dual-core processor, and integrated graphics and sound. The E-Ball has an intuitive icon-based interface that works well for presentations, media, and web browsing but only supports Windows. However, it also has some disadvantages like only working with Windows, high cost, difficulty troubleshooting hardware issues, and less memory and storage than other computers.
This document summarizes a seminar on the E-Ball technology. The E-Ball was designed by Apostol Tnokovski to be the smallest PC. It is a spherical computer that is 160mm in diameter. It contains all the components of a traditional computer, like a motherboard and hard drive, within its ball shape. It projects a virtual keyboard and uses a pico projector to display the screen on any flat surface. The E-Ball has advantages of portability and not needing an external display. However, it requires careful typing on the virtual keyboard and a plane surface to project the keyboard.
The document describes an E-Ball, a spherical computer designed by Apostol Tnokovski. It is small, with a diameter of only 6 inches and a 120x120mm motherboard. It contains wireless keyboards and mice that use infrared rays, lasers and RF signals. The E-Ball has large storage and memory, and can project its display onto surfaces using an LCD projector. While portable and useful for presentations, E-Balls have high costs and compatibility issues, and troubleshooting hardware is difficult.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept that is smaller than any laptop or desktop. It is 6 inches in diameter and contains components like a wireless optical mouse, laser keyboard, LCD projector, hard drive, RAM, and speakers. It works by using infrared rays and lasers for the keyboard and RF signals for the mouse. The document discusses the LCD and DLP projector technologies that could be used, as well as a virtual laser keyboard. It outlines the features and advantages of portability and large memory, but also disadvantages like high cost and difficulty of repairs.
This document proposes a concept for a spherical computer called the E-Ball. The E-Ball would be 160mm in diameter and contain all the components of a traditional desktop computer, including storage, RAM, processors and ports in a compact spherical design. It would project its keyboard and screen onto surfaces using built-in projectors. The E-Ball aims to make computers more portable while fitting all the necessary components into a small spherical shape unlike traditional rectangular computers. It would allow users to work on any flat surface and hide the entire computer when closed. The concept proposes advantages like portability, security and efficiency but also acknowledges challenges like high costs and difficulty supporting standard operating systems.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept measuring 160mm in diameter. It contains all the components of a traditional computer, including a motherboard, hard drive, wireless keyboard and mouse, speakers, and projector. The projector allows the user to project the computer's display onto any flat surface. It works by pressing buttons on the sides to open it and reveal the virtual keyboard and detachable mouse. While portable and space-efficient, the E-Ball also has drawbacks like high cost and difficulty of repairs. Overall, the E-Ball presents an innovative spherical design for miniaturizing the full computer into a small, portable ball-shaped device.
The document discusses the E-Ball, a spherical computer designed by Apostol Tnokopvski. The E-Ball is the smallest computer design at 160mm in diameter and runs on the Windows OS. It contains features like a mouse, DVD drive, large screen display, motherboard, hard drive, webcam, and more. It is designed to be placed on two stands and opened by pressing two buttons simultaneously. The E-Ball has a 350-600GB hard drive, 5GB RAM, dual core processor, integrated graphics and sound, and projects a virtual keyboard onto any flat surface. While portable and powerful, E-Balls are very expensive and operating systems may not be compatible.
The document describes the E-Ball, a concept for a spherical computer. Key aspects of the E-Ball include its small 6-inch diameter size, LCD projector for displaying content on walls or paper, and laser keyboard that projects onto surfaces. The E-Ball would contain standard computer components like a hard drive, RAM, and processor in a portable, sphere-shaped device for presentations or use when a traditional computer is not available or practical.
The document describes the E-ball, a spherical computer created by Apostol Tnokovski. The E-ball has all the components of a traditional computer, such as a motherboard and hard drive, fitted inside a small 6-inch diameter sphere. It projects its display and uses an optical virtual keyboard. The E-ball allows for activities like presentations, media viewing, and internet access from its portable design. While innovative, it also has drawbacks like high cost and difficulty supporting standard operating systems.
The document describes a spherical computer called the E-Ball. The E-Ball was designed by Apostol Tnokovski to be the smallest PC ever made in a spherical shape. It has a projected keyboard and display. The E-Ball has all the features of a traditional computer inside its 160mm round sphere and projects its screen onto walls or paper sheets using an internal projector. It contains components like a virtual keyboard, processor, RAM, hard drive and projector. The E-Ball allows for portable use and large screen presentations but has a very high cost and could be difficult to repair hardware issues.
It gives information regarding 6 different cyber attacks which most of the people become a victim of and which part of society is affected by which attack.
It explains how this attacks are done by hackers and explains ways to prevent them.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept. The E-Ball is a small 6-inch diameter sphere containing a 120x120mm motherboard. It has wireless keyboard and mouse, an LCD projector, 350-600GB hard drive, 5GB RAM, speakers, networking cards, and an optional paper sheet screen. While portable and powerful for presentations, the E-Ball has a high cost and potential difficulty with hardware repairs due to its compact size.
The E-Ball is a sphere shaped computer concept which is the smallest design among all the laptops and desktops have ever made. This PC concept features all the traditional elements like mouse, keyboard, large screen display, DVD recorder, etc, all in an innovative manner.
Este documento describe dos experiencias de comunidades virtuales de aprendizaje. La primera es un grupo de Facebook para un curso que permite compartir ideas y recursos. La segunda es una wiki sobre ciencias contemporáneas que recopila artículos, presentaciones y videos aportados por investigadores.
El documento describe las actividades de una unidad didáctica sobre la construcción de un PLE (Personal Learning Environment) o entorno personal de aprendizaje, que incluye crear cuentas en Gmail, Twitter, Google Reader y Diigo, así como establecer un blog, con el objetivo de mejorar el aprendizaje y la colaboración en red.
Autoridades de fiscalizacion y control social en telecomunicaciones boliviawincarlos
el desconocimiento de las funciones de las Autoridades de Fiscalización y Control Social en el área de Telecomunicaciones es muy grande, por eso en aula de Derecho Informático se realizo el presente trabajo, como siempre espero sea de gran ayuda para todos.
El documento describe las vacaciones de Milena Hernández en Ibagué con amigos y familiares. Pasó tiempo con amigos jugando microfútbol y apostando gaseosas, fue a la piscina con sus hermanos donde la tiraron como un pescado, y visitó un zoológico. También se comunicó con primos en Bogotá a través de chat. Después de varios días, tuvo que regresar a Bogotá aunque algunos no querían que se fuera.
El documento describe las actividades realizadas por Juan Fernando Cañadas Caldito para construir su PLE (entorno personal de aprendizaje), incluyendo capturas de complementos, su escritorio personalizado, un blog y la herramienta Memolane para registrar su aprendizaje y colaborar en red.
El documento resume las principales ramas de la biología como disciplina científica, incluyendo la botánica, microbiología, citología, ecología, histología, anatomía, fisiología, evolución y zoología. Explica que la zoología se subdivide en ictiología, mastozoología, entomología, ornitología y herpetología. Además, brinda detalles sobre los principales aportes a la biología a través de la historia.
Esta es una presentacion de mi muy admirado Octavio Paz, poeta, ensayista, diplomatico, catedratico y muchas otras virtudes, que como buen mexicano saco a relucir.
Распространение музыки в Интернете началось с появления формата MP3, сжимающего звуковые файлы до размеров, пригодных для передачи в Интернете при сохранении качества записи. Появление в Интернете отдельных песен с нового диска исполнителя служит для него хорошей рекламой и существенно повышает уровень продаж записей.
The document describes the E-Ball concept PC, a spherical computer that is the smallest laptop or desktop design. It measures 160mm in diameter and contains components like a motherboard, hard drive, screen projector, mouse, and keyboard. The E-Ball opens by pressing buttons on each side and projects its screen onto a wall using the built-in projector. It has a virtual keyboard and can also project onto paper if no wall is available. The document discusses the E-Ball's advantages like portability and efficiency but also notes its high cost as a disadvantage.
This document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer created by Apostol Tnokopvski that is the smallest PC design. It has a diameter of only 6 inches and contains components like a dual core processor, 2GB of RAM, 350-500GB hard drive, integrated graphics and sound card, wireless optical mouse, LCD projector, and paper holder. It projects a holographic keyboard and works without walls by using the paper holder as a screen. Some advantages are its portability, large memory, and ability to make presentations, while disadvantages include incompatibility with normal OS's and high cost.
The document describes the E-ball, a spherical computer concept that is the smallest PC design. Key features include a 6-inch diameter sphere size with a 120x120mm motherboard. It uses infrared and laser for keyboard input and projects the display onto surfaces. While portable and useful for presentations, E-balls also have high costs and incompatibility with normal operating systems.
The document describes E-Ball, a spherical computer measuring 160mm in diameter that contains all the components of a traditional computer. E-Ball uses an LCD projector to project a virtual keyboard and display onto any flat surface. It has features like a wireless mouse, large storage, RAM and processors. To use it, the user presses the power button to open E-Ball and projects the keyboard and screen. E-Ball allows computing in small spaces and on the go. While portable and powerful, it also has high costs and potential hardware issues.
The document summarizes a seminar presentation on the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept that is the smallest PC design. Key details include that the E-Ball was created by Apostol Tnokovski, has a 6 inch diameter sphere shape, includes components like a motherboard, processor, RAM, hard drive, and wireless accessories. It projects a holographic keyboard and uses an optical mouse. The E-Ball is portable, has a large memory, can be used for presentations, and supports Windows operating systems, but is costly and difficult for general users. It represents how computer technology has advanced to fit full computers into small portable designs.
The E-Ball is a spherical computer that is the smallest PC ever made, with a diameter of only 6 inches. It contains features of a traditional computer like a motherboard, hard drive, wireless keyboard and mouse, LCD projector, and speakers. The virtual keyboard is projected onto any flat surface using infrared sensors to detect keystrokes. While innovative, the E-Ball has high production costs and operating systems may have trouble running on its unique design.
The document describes an E-Ball, a spherical computer created by Apostol Tnokovski. It is the smallest PC ever made, with a diameter of only 6 inches. The E-Ball contains all standard computer components, including a motherboard, hard drive, RAM, speakers, wireless keyboard and mouse projected using lasers, and LCD or DLP projectors to display the screen on any flat surface. It has advantages of portability and ability to project the display in any open space, but disadvantages of high cost and difficulty in accessing internal components if problems occur.
A new concept of pc is coming now that is E-Ball Concept pc. The E-Ball concept pc is a sphere shaped computer which is the smallest design among all the laptops and desktops. This computer has all the feature like a traditional computer, elements like keyboard or mouse., dvd, large screen display.
E Ball is designed that pc is be placed on two stands, opens by pressing and holding the two buttons located on each side of the E-Ball pc , this pc is the latest concept technology. The E-Ball is a sphere shaped computer concept which is the smallest design among all the laptops and desktops have ever made.
This PC concept features all the traditional elements like mouse, keyboard, large screen display, DVD recorder, etc, all in an innovative manner. E-Ball is designed to be placed on two stands, opens by simultaneously pressing and holding the two buttons located on each side. After opening the stand and turning ON the PC, pressing the detaching mouse button will allow you to detach the optical mouse from the PC body. This concept features a laser keyboard that can be activated by pressing the particular button. E-Ball is very small, it is having only 6 inch diameter sphere. It is having 120×120mm motherboard.
This document presents a seminar on E-Ball technology, which is a spherical computer that is smaller than laptops and desktops. The E-Ball has a 6-inch diameter sphere shape and contains components like a motherboard, processor, RAM, hard drive, ports and integrated graphics/sound. It projects a holographic keyboard and uses an optical mouse and LCD projector. The E-Ball is portable and useful for presentations, with advantages of size and speed but high costs and potential difficulty with repairs.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept designed to be the smallest PC. It has all the components of a traditional computer, such as a keyboard, mouse, large screen display, and DVD recorder, housed within a 6-inch diameter sphere. It opens via buttons on the sides and projects its screen onto a wall or paper sheet. The E-Ball aims to make computing even more portable without sacrificing traditional features.
The document describes a spherical computer called the E-Ball. The E-Ball was designed by Apostol Tnokovski to be the smallest PC ever made in a spherical shape. It has a projected keyboard and display. The E-Ball has all the features of a traditional computer inside its 160mm round sphere and projects its screen onto walls or paper sheets using an internal projector. It contains components like a virtual keyboard, processor, RAM, hard drive and projector. The interface recognizes fingers using IR sensors for typing and has a pop-out mouse. While expensive, the portable E-Ball allows for video presentations on large screens.
1. The E-Ball is a concept for a spherical computer designed by Apostol Tnokovski that aims to be the smallest PC ever made, containing all standard components like a mouse, keyboard, and screen within a 6-inch diameter sphere.
2. It would project its screen onto a wall using a built-in projector and use a virtual laser keyboard and optical mouse controlled by sensors and cameras.
3. Advantages include portability and large storage, while disadvantages are limited compatibility to only Windows and high production costs.
The document describes the E-Ball concept PC, a spherical computer that is the smallest design among laptops and desktops. The E-Ball has all the components of a traditional PC, like a keyboard, mouse, large screen display, and DVD recorder, contained within a 6-inch diameter sphere. It is designed to be placed on two stands and opened by pressing buttons on each side. When opened, it projects the desktop interface onto a wall or paper sheet using an integrated projector. The E-Ball aims to be a fully functional yet highly portable computer concept.
The document describes the E-Ball, a spherical computer designed by Macedonian product designer Apostol Tnokovski. It has a dual core processor, 2GB RAM, 350-500GB hard drive and other components. It projects a virtual keyboard, uses a laser projector to display on walls or paper, and has an optical mouse. Advantages are its portability and large memory. Limitations include only working on Windows and high cost limiting users. It represents new frontiers in portable computer technology.
The E-ball is a proposed futuristic spherical computer design that would be the smallest PC ever made. It was proposed by Apostol Tnokovski and would have a sphere shape with all standard computer components like a processor, RAM, hard drive, graphics/sound cards, speakers, and holographic display projected using an infrared laser keyboard for input. The E-ball would be highly portable and space efficient while still allowing for standard computing tasks like office work, media consumption, and presentations. However, it would only be compatible with Windows and have a very high cost due to its advanced technology.
The document summarizes the E-Ball, a spherical computer concept created by Apostol Tnokopvski. The E-Ball has a diameter of only 6 inches and contains all the components of a traditional desktop PC, like a keyboard, mouse, hard drive, RAM, and projector to display the screen on walls or paper. It aims to be the smallest PC design and is fully functional despite its compact size. Some advantages include portability and ability to give presentations, though it only supports the Windows OS and has a high cost.
The document summarizes the E-Ball, the smallest PC ever made. It is a spherical computer that is 160mm in diameter. It contains components like a dual core processor, 2GB of RAM, 350-500GB hard drive, integrated graphics and sound card, speakers, wireless mouse, networking cards, and a webcam. It projects a holographic keyboard and can be used for presentations due to its portability and large memory.
The document describes a concept for a spherical computer called the E-Ball. The E-Ball would be the smallest computer design to date, containing all the conventional components of a PC like a mouse, keyboard and screen within a 6-inch diameter sphere. It would project a virtual keyboard and use infrared rays, lasers and Bluetooth to allow keyboard and mouse functions without physical keys or devices. While innovative, the E-Ball would also be very expensive and present usability challenges compared to traditional computers.
The document describes an "E-Ball", a spherical computer around 6 inches in diameter. It contains components like a wireless optical mouse, laser keyboard, LCD projector, motherboard, hard drive, RAM, speakers, processor, networking cards, and webcam. It projects a virtual keyboard and mouse onto any flat surface using sensor technology. The E-Ball has advantages like portability and large storage, and can be used for presentations, movies, music and chatting. However, it requires specialized software and is very expensive. In conclusion, the E-Ball represents new frontiers in portable computing technology.
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4. Introduction
Size of E-Ball
The start of E-Ball
Elements of E-Ball
If there is no wall?
Working of E-Ball
Features of E-Ball
Advantages of E-Ball
Disadvantages
Scenarios in use
Conclusion
4
10. When we are working in an open place we can make
use of a paper sheet as a screen.
paper sheet holder is placed at the back panel of this
computer.
The holder can be opened by pressing it in the lower
part.
10
14. The software interface of E-Ball concept pc is highly
stylized with icons that can be remembered easily that
support all type of windows operating system.
15. i-tech Virtual keyboard
Dual core processor
2GB RAM
350-500GB hard drive
Integrated graphics and sound card
Speakers
Wireless optical mouse
LAN & WAN card
Modem
Web cam
LCD projector
Paper holder 15
16. It is portable.
E-Ball has large memory.
Useful for making video presentations.
These have greater speed.
Supports user-defined keyboard layouts
16
17. Normal OS can’t work in these computers.
Cost of E-Ball is very high.
It is difficult to understand if any problems occur in
hardware components.
17
18.
19. Today’s technology is at its peak point beyond what
we could ever imagine.
New inventions and innovations are emerging on
daily basis.
As years passes, the computer size is becoming
smaller.
20. Our imaginations have dressed into reality and today
it has become possible to have a whole computer in
our pocket all the time. This ball computer has taken
the computer technology to new horizons.
20