yes
This question is non-sense, but if the computer is unplugged, it can not acquire a virus. I think it's meant to say, "If your computer is unplugged and then plugged back in, will there be any viruses waiting to infect the computer?" That's what I think.
Another name that computer chassis's go by is a CPU or motherboard which is the internal part that runs the computer itself just like how a car chassis is the engine.
The outer shell of a computer is called the computer case or chassis. It is typically made of metal or plastic and houses all the internal components of the computer, providing protection and organization for the hardware.
A network cable is not plugged in to your computer or to a device on the other end.
yes it is.
Depending on what you're doing, many people will use a grounding strap to prevent static from destroying some of the cards. Personally, I just leave the computer plugged in, (turned off) which grounds the chassis. Then I always touch the chassis before I do any work. Many people ALWAYS use wrist grounding straps but I only use them if I need to unplug the computer, such as when I might need to work on it with an unplugged power supply.
It says that it is not a real computer.
There is a battery inside the computer to keep the time while the computer is off or unplugged.
chassis of the car
The term chassis is the frame plus the "running gears". So, the chassis is the frame, engine, drive shaft, differential, transmission...etc
Who cares! Real Americans drive American trucks. Look at a F150 chassis.
no if you do that it can after time get a virus and break down