Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Digital_electronic_computer> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 85 of
85
with 100 triples per page.
- Digital_electronic_computer abstract "In computer science, a digital electronic computer is a computer machine which is both an electronic computer and a digital computer. Examples of a digital electronic computers include the IBM PC, the Apple Macintosh as well as modern smartphones. When computers that were both digital and electronic appeared, they displaced almost all other kinds of computers, but computation has historically been performed in various non-digital and non-electronic ways: the Lehmer sieve is an example of a digital non-electronic computer, while analog computers are examples of non-digital computers which can be electronic (with analog electronics), and mechanical computers are examples of non-electronic computers (which may be digital or not). An example of a computer which is both non-digital and non-electronic is the ancient Antikythera mechanism found in Greece. All kinds of computers, whether they are digital or analog, and electronic or non-electronic, can be Turing complete if they have sufficient memory. A digital electronic computer is not necessarily a programmable computer, a stored program computer, or a general purpose computer, since in essence a digital electronic computer can be built for one specific application and be non-reprogrammable. As of 2014, most personal computers and smartphones in people's homes that use multicore central processing units (such as AMD FX, Intel Core i7, or the multicore varieties of ARM-based chips) are also parallel computers using the MIMD (multiple instructions - multiple data) paradigm, a technology previously only used in digital electronic supercomputers. As of 2014, most digital electronic supercomputers are also cluster computers, a technology that can be used at home in the form of small Beowulf clusters. Parallel computation is also possible with non-digital or non-electronic computers. An example of a parallel computation system using the abacus would be a group of human computers using a number of abacus machines for computation and communicating using natural language.A digital computer can perform its operations in the decimal system, in binary, in ternary or in other numeral systems. As of 2014, all digital electronic computers commonly used, whether personal computers or supercomputers, are working in the binary number system and also use binary logic. A few ternary computers using ternary logic were built mainly in the Soviet Union as research projects (googling for it can lead to some web-based simulators of those ternary computers).A digital electronic computer is not necessarily a transistorized computer: before the advent of the transistor, computers used vacuum tubes. The transistor enabled electronic computers to become much more powerful, and recent and future developments in digital electronics may enable humanity to build even more powerful electronic computers. One such possible development is the memristor.People living in the beginning of the 21st century use digital electronic computers for storing data, such as photos, music, documents, and for performing complex mathematical computations or for communication, commonly over a worldwide computer network called the internet which connects many of the world's computers. All these activities made possible by digital electronic computers could, in essence, be performed with non-digital or non-electronic computers if they were sufficiently powerful, but it was only the combination of electronics technology with digital computation in binary that enabled humanity to reach the computation power necessary for today's computing. Advances in quantum computing, DNA computing, optical computing or other technologies could lead to the development of more powerful computers in the future.Digital computers are inherently best described by discrete mathematics, while analog computers are most commonly associated with continuous mathematics.The philosophy of digital physics views the universe as being digital. Konrad Zuse wrote a book known as Rechnender Raum in which he described the whole universe as one all-encompassing computer.".
- Digital_electronic_computer thumbnail Lehmer_sieve.jpg?width=300.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageID "42249611".
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageLength "5064".
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageOutDegree "74".
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageRevisionID "653947403".
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink AMD_FX.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink ARM_architecture.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Abacus.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Analog_computer.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Analogue_electronics.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Antikythera_mechanism.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Beowulf_cluster.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Binary_number.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Boolean_algebra.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Calculating_Space.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Computers.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Central_processing_unit.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Computation.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Computer.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Computer_cluster.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Computer_data_storage.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Computer_memory.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Computer_network.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Computer_science.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink DNA_computing.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Data.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Decimal.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Digital_electronics.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Digital_physics.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Discrete_mathematics.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Document.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink EDVAC.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink ENIAC.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink File:Lehmer_sieve.jpg.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Greece.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink History_of_computing_hardware.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Human_computer.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink IBM_Personal_Computer.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Intel_Core.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Internet.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Konrad_Zuse.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Lehmer_sieve.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink List_of_transistorized_computers.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink List_of_vacuum_tube_computers.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink MIMD.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Macintosh.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Mathematical_analysis.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Mechanical_computer.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Memristor.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Multi-core_processor.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Music.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Natural_language.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Numeral_system.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Optical_computing.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Parallel_computing.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Personal_computer.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Photograph.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Quantum_computing.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Smartphone.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Soviet_Union.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Stored-program_computer.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Supercomputer.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Ternary_computer.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Ternary_numeral_system.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Three-valued_logic.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Transistor.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Transistorized_computer.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Turing_completeness.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Universe.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLink Vacuum_tube.
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLinkText "Digital electronic computer".
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageWikiLinkText "digital electronic computer".
- Digital_electronic_computer wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Compu-sci-stub.
- Digital_electronic_computer subject Category:Computers.
- Digital_electronic_computer hypernym Machine.
- Digital_electronic_computer type Software.
- Digital_electronic_computer comment "In computer science, a digital electronic computer is a computer machine which is both an electronic computer and a digital computer. Examples of a digital electronic computers include the IBM PC, the Apple Macintosh as well as modern smartphones.".
- Digital_electronic_computer label "Digital electronic computer".
- Digital_electronic_computer sameAs Q16961810.
- Digital_electronic_computer sameAs m.0100stb5.
- Digital_electronic_computer sameAs Q16961810.
- Digital_electronic_computer wasDerivedFrom Digital_electronic_computer?oldid=653947403.
- Digital_electronic_computer depiction Lehmer_sieve.jpg.
- Digital_electronic_computer isPrimaryTopicOf Digital_electronic_computer.