If it is a desktop, no. If it is a laptop, yes, it has a battery and you charge it in the wall.
Most financial companies will not charge for loans for computers if you have bad credit. However, if you want to take a loan from a bank, they would ask you to apply for a traditional credit loan.
the good thing about computers is it allows you to save information use softwares like word exel and the internet
Computers, at least no mainstream computers, do not have feathers.
No, they only make peripherals for computers not computers themselves.
no That is for early computers
The Battery, if you are meaning electrical charge in a laptop?
yes.
Most financial companies will not charge for loans for computers if you have bad credit. However, if you want to take a loan from a bank, they would ask you to apply for a traditional credit loan.
Plug it into a USB socket. If you want to charge it in the car, Scan Computers sell adapters so you can plug a USB stick into a car.
I don't think so...magnets are very harmful to computers.
the good thing about computers is it allows you to save information use softwares like word exel and the internet
Plug the charger cable into the iPod, then into a certified wall adapter or USB 2.0 (standard with most computers) port in the computer to charge it.
Price and DRM. You can only use Mac OS X on an Apple computer (legally). And they charge a lot for their computers.
You can charge the iPad by either plugging it into your computer, or using the iPad 10W USB Power Adapter. You can also charge it while it is docked. If you have a plug nearby, use the 10W power adapter to get a faster charge most of the time. Note that many USB ports cannot deliver the current required to charge the iPads battery. This is why you will Not Charging on the display when you connect it to some computers.
It is a flow of electric charge that carries energy along wires for television, cooking, aircon, lights, computers and many other good things.
For a home PC, it is the user account that has all the privileges like installing programs and modifying the computer, for a network or business, it is the person that is in charge of maintaining and upgrading the computers and network. He is also responsible for fixing the computers when they break.
Computers are built off of electronic circuits, in which there is either no voltage or there is some positive number (usually 3.3V, 5V or 12V). 1 represents an electric charge while 0 represents no charge.