shaqtastic and shaqtactular
vdt
Video Data Toolkit
Visual Divice umm
VDT stands for video display terminal or visual display terminal. It is a computer term which is familiarly known to us as the monitor. Its job is to communicate to the user, through texts, pictures, and videos the results of the computing process.
Video Display Tube, an old name for the computer monitor.
(Video Display Terminal) An input/output device that contains a screen, keyboard and mouse.
The result of processing data on a computer can be viewed on a display, monitor, screen, CRT, VDT, LED display, printer or be obtained by voice output.
Sure. By finding the area under the curve within the limits of time, we can find the distance covered in that time duration. Since v = ds / dt, ds = v dt. So for small time gap dt, vdt gives the displacement ds. So by integrating vdt for the limits, we can get the total displacement S
A visual display terminal (VDT) is commonly referred to as a computer monitor or screen. It is an output device that displays visual information generated by a computer. VDTs can come in various forms, including LCD, LED, and OLED screens, and are essential for interacting with computer applications and systems.
The CPU (Central Processing Unit) - is the 'brains' of the computer... the main circuit board. The VDU (Visual Display Unit) - is the monitor or screen that the computer displays information on.
The original name for a monitor was "video display terminal" (VDT), which referred to devices that combined a screen and keyboard for user interaction with computers. In earlier computing, terms like "console" or "cathode ray tube" (CRT) were also used, particularly before the transition to modern LCD and LED displays. Over time, as technology evolved, the term "monitor" became the standard designation for these devices.
Until the early 1980's most monitors were terminals. They were boxy video display terminals (VDT's) combined with an attached keyboard.In 1981, IBM introduced the first PC, also known as a "three-piece computer" because the monitor, keyboard and CPU were separate, rather than earlier computer terminals, which combined the monitor and keyboard.