Source: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20061203201108AAViuhX
The First Computer was roughly 8 feet (2.4 m) by 3 feet (0.9 m) by 100 feet (30 m), and took up 1800 square feet (167 m²)
I cheated a bit on this one, but I hope it helped :P
These days, a large business computer with most of the space filled with disk drives, or a multiprocessor supercomputer with a billion or more CPUs,
Depending on what you do with the computer and what else the room might be used for. Your best bet would probably be with putting the computer towards the wall to provide room to do other things.
You should work on your computer in a well lit room.A well lit room reduces the strain on your eyes.
"Amektech, 42u, and ultimate computer room pros are just a few of the many expects you may choose to design your computer room."
Probably not. it needs a clear line of sight and the range is limited.
The first computer was big enough to fill an entire room. Today, computers are so small that people can hold them in their hands.
air or water
Almost all of the early vacuum tube computers took a whole room. The biggest computer ever built (IBM SAGE - air defense computer, 1958) took a whole floor of the building it was in.
That's impossible
In Bletchly park, in Britain, during ww2 by a group of code breakers. however, it was the size of a whole room - the first computer for public use was developed much later in the usa
the wizard of oz is a ventriloquist
History of computer is divided into 5 generation. The first generation of computer started form 1941 till 1956. In this generation vacuum tubes are used in computers and computers are big enough that one computer could be such big as a whole room.
Size ! The earliest computers used to literally fill a room with valves ans switches - the same computing power used in the first room-sized computers can now be found in a digital watch !
A drug can permeate the room if it is in the form of a compressed gas, or if it is volatile and evaporates (or sublimes) at the temperature of the room. Of course, unless it displaces the air, it cannot "fill" the room, but as a gas or aerosol it can mix with all of the air in the room -- assuming that it can mix, and is not so light or so heavy that it accumulates at the ceiling or floor.
At 27 tonnes and the size of an entire room, the world's first computer is just as elaborate as its name suggests
It occupied a large room in size
Fill Up the Room was created on 2007-10-23.