An input device is any peripheral used to provide data and control signals to an information processing system ... examples - mouse, keyboard
An output device is any peripheral used to communicate the results of data processing carried out by an information processing system ... examples - printer, monitor, speaker
Input devices include:
Keyboard - enter keystrokes into computer
Mouse - interact with point and click commands
Output devices include:
Monitor - view computer data to the user
Printer - display information on paper
Speaker - transmit audio signals to user
Input devices, like a camera. You put the pictures from your camera INTO your computer.
Output devices, like an amplifier. You take the sounds emitting from your computer, OUt the amplifier.
Input - keyboard or mouse. Output - display screen or printer.
An input device could be a memory stick and an output device can be a keyboard
By "around the house" I assume you mean in every day appearance. Input: Keyboard, Mouse Output: Monitor, Printer
I expect you mean "Is Card reader/writer input or output?". If this is so, it is both an input and output device. Whenever you are trying to categorize a device as Input or Output, think of how it looks from the computer.If the computer is transmitting data to it, it is an Output device.If the computer is receiving data from it, it is an Input device.
Technically it's neither as it's just a shell that houses the devices. However, if you just mean the computer as a whole, then it is of course both because it's made up of input and output devices.
do you mean like the optimus maximus, where they charge a rediculous amount of money to make something look "cool" or are you refering to suff like multi-touch sensitive displays, the keyboard in a glove, the frogpad one handed keyboard, or computers that can read our minds?
accessories are Monitor, printer, Rat (mouse), scanner, keyboard. Monitors and printers are output devices RAT (mouse), keyboard and scanners are input devices Hmm, gave more than 4, devices. A camera is also an accessory, or do you mean accessory to a crime, well that's a different question all together ;) Cheers!
If you mean, "what devices can act as input and output?" then the answer is Touchscreens. Multifunction scanners/printers DO NOT count.
any instruction to somthing to do a task ,so here the instruction is input when you get a output from your instruction
By "around the house" I assume you mean in every day appearance. Input: Keyboard, Mouse Output: Monitor, Printer
I assume by headset you mean something with both headphones and a microphone. I that case, it is both an input AND output device.
The acronym for MIMO stands for multiple input multiple output. It is used when describing a devices input and outputs ports for sending or receiving information to and from other devices.
A console is simply another term for a computer terminal. All computer terminals have input and output devices but as console programmers we don't always have the luxury of knowing the specific details about those devices. All we can say for sure about any input or output device is that those devices are character streams. That is, we can extract characters from an input device and we can insert characters into an output device. Most console programs accept input via a keyboard and present output upon a screen or monitor, however it is never safe to assume that that will always be the case. This is because console programs have two global devices known as standard input and standard output (stdin and stdout, respectively). If we make use of either of these devices then we can never really be certain what physical devices are attached to them because the user must always be free to decide that for themselves. However, because all console input and output devices are character streams, it really doesn't matter what physical devices are used, we can treat them all exactly the same. A lot of new programmers often make the mistake of enforcing specific devices upon the standard input and output streams, but this is one of those cases where just because we can do something it doesn't mean that we should. Standard input/output devices must always be user-defined, never programmer-enforced. A console program can make use of as many input and output devices as it needs in addition to the standard input and output devices. Thus if a program needs to extract information from a specific disk file then it is free to do so -- there is no need to redirect standard input to that file.
Assuming by in you mean input and out you mean output. Input is the value that goes in while the output is the value you receive. Between these terms is a rule, called the nth term that will always work to help you find the input/output. For example. Our input is 2, and our output is 10 the rule here could be the input multiplied by 5 equals the output, or it can be something extremely difficult and unfathomable even to a banker...
An input device is a piece of hardware that you put data into the computer, such as a mouse or keyboard. An output device is something that the computer controls to output data, such as the screen or speakers.
The input means the problem and the output means the answer! [but not in math]
The rule of a function in math is what relates the input value to the output value. For example, if f(x) = x2, the "function rule" is to square the input value to get the output value.
I expect you mean "Is Card reader/writer input or output?". If this is so, it is both an input and output device. Whenever you are trying to categorize a device as Input or Output, think of how it looks from the computer.If the computer is transmitting data to it, it is an Output device.If the computer is receiving data from it, it is an Input device.
Desktop are both, mean input and output, but in some times it is call out put device.