Nesting is the process of organizing information in layers. For an example, a loop in a program can contain another loop which can contain yet another loop. This is called nested loops.
supercomputers allows both parallel and distributed computing
What is the difference between parallel computing and distributing computing? In the most simple form = Parallel Computing is a method where several individual (autonomous) systems (CPU's) work in tandem to resolve a common computing workload. Distributed Computing is where several dis-associated systems are working seperatly to resolve a multi-faceted computing workload. An example of Parallel computing would be two servers that share the workload of routing mail, managing connections to an accounting system or database, solving a mathematical problem, ect... Distributed Computing would be more like the SETI Program, where each client works a seperate "chunk" of information, and returns the completed package to a centralized resource that's responsible for managing the overall workload. If you think of ten men pulling on a rope to lift a load, that is parallel computing. If ten men have ten ropes and are lifting ten different loads from one place to consolidate at another place, that would be distributed computing.
he told that science is science and sciance cannot be science if sceince if science is not science and if science did not come from science the science will not be science
science is science!!
dour science is science obviously
Quantum Computing
Computing Science
dd
Quantum computing.
E - Energy (Academic & Science » Chemistry) NRG - Energy (Computing » SMS)
LTU is the acronym for "Line Termination Unit" when associating LTU with science and computing terms. There are many sites that state that there are many other meanings for the acronym LTU.
Soft computing is a term applied to a field within computer science which is characterized by the use of inexact solutions to computationally hard tasks. Soft computing covers similar topics of computational intelligence, natural computing, and organic computing.
emotional and social skills.
science, computing/consoles and telecomunication (i.e. telephone)
Soft computing is a term applied to a field within computer science which is characterized by the use of inexact solutions to computationally hard tasks. Soft computing covers similar topics of computational intelligence, natural computing, and organic computing.
False. Affective computing is computing that relates to emotion or deliberately tries to influence emotion
Theory of Computing - journal - was created in 2005.