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Technology

The practical application of knowledge, especially in a particular area, is called technology. Advances in technology affect every area of our lives. This category is for questions about technology and includes everything from how to remove a scratch from a CD to applications of electronics to what polyester is made from and more.

35,090 Questions

What is the different between using 32 bit and 64 Bit Versions software?

32 bit and 64 bit are 2 types of versions of software available. 64 bit software are more secure than 32 bit.

Who is the author of education.com?

Education.com is a website for parents. We acquire content in a few different ways. First, we've partnered with the top universities, not-for-profits, government agencies & research organizations across the country to gain access to content on hundreds of topics of interest to parents. Second, we have a team of editors and freelance writers who create original content for our site. Finally, we offer parents and parenting experts the opportunity to share their experience and expertise by writing answers to JustAsk questions and reviewing schools on SchoolFinder. The net is that in one visit, parents have access to:

  • Thousands of fun and educational activities and printables.
  • Access to tens of thousands of current, credible, and easy to read articles.
  • Fun and insightful video content offering everything from parenting advice to step-by-step activity instruction.
  • A rich community that helps parents connect with each other and with leading experts.
  • Qualitative and quantitative information on preschools, K-12 schools, and higher learning institutions.

So, we don't really have a single "author", rather a network of people and organizations work together to bring parents this great resource. Hope that helps - and hope you'll check us out! www.education.com

Kat Eden (Education.com)

Who is a french inventor in the 19th century who invited a way for blind people to read?

Louis Braille, a French inventor born in 1809, created a system of raised dots arranged in cells to enable people who are blind or visually impaired to read and write. This system, known as braille, revolutionized communication and access to information for individuals with visual disabilities.

Definition of motivation by different authors?

  1. Abraham Maslow: Motivation is the process of satisfying certain needs that are innate or acquired through life experiences.
  2. Frederick Herzberg: Motivation stems from satisfying two types of needs - hygiene factors to prevent dissatisfaction and motivators to encourage satisfaction.
  3. Douglas McGregor: Motivation is influenced by an individual's assumptions about human nature, with Theory X suggesting people are inherently lazy and Theory Y proposing they are naturally motivated to work.

Who is the author of deception point?

Dan Brown is the author of "Deception Point." The book is a thriller involving a NASA discovery that could change the course of presidential history.

What is Isaac Asimov's 2nd law of robotics?

Isaac Asimov's second law of robotics states: "A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law." This law emphasizes the importance of following human commands while also considering the safety and well-being of humans.

What was Robert Frost's failure?

Robert Frost didn't experience a notable failure in his literary career. He achieved great success as a poet, winning four Pulitzer Prizes for poetry and receiving numerous other awards and accolades for his work.

How you hide your number from whome you call?

Search the 'net for "Caller ID Spoofing". There are several services out there that offer you one free trial call, and for a small fee a set number of minutes.

Some even let you change the pitch of your voice (man sound like a woman or a woman sound like a man). The pitch thing does fool people, but it sounds strange. Anyone who is mildly suspicious would detect that voice-changing technology is being used.

I do not know if this works for 800 or 866 numbers, as they use ANI (Automatic Number Identification), not caller ID.

Of course there is always *67 (block caller ID), but many people have their lines set to stop calls that have caller ID disabled. The spoofing technique circumvents that.

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Note you cannot hide or spoof your number from a toll-free call (800, 866, etc.). The called party will get your number regardless of any caller ID blocking.

What famous people were born on October 18th?

1127 - Emperor Go-Shirakawa of Japan (d. 1192)

1405 - Pope Pius II (d. 1464)

1517 - Manoel da Nóbrega, Portuguese Jesuit in Brazil (d. 1570)

1547 - Justus Lipsius, Flemish humanist (d. 1606)

1569 - Giambattista Marini, Italian poet (d. 1625)

1595 - Edward Winslow, Plymouth Colony founder (d. 1655)

1634 - Luca Giordano, Italian artist (d. 1705)

1653 - Abraham van Riebeeck, Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies (d. 1713)

1662 - Matthew Henry, English non-conformist minister (d. 1714)

1668 - John George IV, Elector of Saxony (d. 1694)

1679 - Ann Putnam, Jr., American accuser in the Salem Witch Trials (d. 1716)

1701 - Charles le Beau, French historian (d. 1778)

1706 - Baldassare Galuppi, Italian composer (d. 1785)

1741 - Pierre Choderlos de Laclos, French general and author (d. 1803)

1777 - Heinrich von Kleist, German writer (d. 1811)

1785 - Thomas Love Peacock, English satirist (d. 1866)

1854 - Billy Murdoch, Australian cricketer (d. 1911)

1859 - Henri Bergson, French philosopher, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature (d. 1941)

1865 - Arie de Jong, Dutch linguist (d. 1957)

1865 - Logan Pearsall Smith, American essayist and critic (d. 1946)

1868 - Ernst Didring, Swedish author (d. 1931)

1870 - Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, Japanese scholar (d. 1966)

1873 - Ivanoe Bonomi, Prime Minister of Italy (d. 1951)

1882 - Lucien Petit-Breton, Argentine-French cyclist (d. 1917)

1893 - Georges Ohsawa, Japanese founder of Macrobiotics (d. 1966)

1894 - H. L. Davis, American author (d. 1960)

1897 - Isabel Briggs Myers, American psychological theorist (d. 1980)

1900 - Lotte Lenya, Austrian singer and actress (d. 1981)

1902 - Miriam Hopkins, American actress (d. 1972)

1902 - Pascual Jordan, German physicist (d. 1980)

1903 - Lina Radke, German athlete (d. 1983)

1904 - A. J. Liebling, American journalist (d. 1963)

1905 - Jan Gies, Dutch resistance fighter (d. 1993)

1905 - Félix Houphouët-Boigny, first President of Côte d'Ivoire (d. 1993)

1906 - James Brooks, American painter (d. 1992)

1909 - Norberto Bobbio, Italian philosopher and legal theorist (d. 2004)

1913 - Robert Gilruth, American aviation and space pioneer (d. 2000)

1914 - Raymond Lambert, Swiss mountaineer (d. 1997)

1915 - Victor Sen Yung, American actor (d. 1980)

1918 - Bobby Troup, American musician (d. 1999)

1919 - Ric Nordman, Canadian politician (d. 1996)

1919 - Anita O'Day, American singer (d. 2006)

1919 - Pierre Elliott Trudeau, 15th Prime Minister of Canada (d. 2000)

1920 - Melina Mercouri, Greek actress and Minister for Culture of Greece (d. 1994)

1921 - Jesse Helms, American politician (d. 2008)

1924 - Hugh Allan "Buddy" MacMaster, Canadian musician

1925 - Ramiz Alia, political leader of Albania

1926 - Chuck Berry, American musician

1926 - Klaus Kinski, German actor (d. 1991)

1927 - George C. Scott, American actor (d. 1999)

1928 - Keith Jackson, American football commentator

1929 - Violeta Chamorro, President of Nicaragua

1931 - Chris Albertson, American jazz historian

1932 - Vytautas Landsbergis, Lithuanian politician

1933 - Forrest Gregg, American football player

1934 - Calvin Lockhart, Bahamian actor (d. 2007)

1934 - Inger Stevens, Swedish actress (d. 1970)

1934 - Chuck Swindoll, American evangelist

1935 - Peter Boyle, American actor (d. 2006)

1937 - Cynthia Weil, American songwriter

1938 - Dawn Wells, American actress

1939 - Mike Ditka, American football player, coach, and commentator

1939 - Lee Harvey Oswald, purported American assassin of John F. Kennedy (d. 1963)

1939 - Flavio Cotti, member of the Swiss Federal Council

1942 - Larry Pickering, Australian newspaper cartoonist

1943 - Birthe Rønn Hornbech, Danish politician

1945 - Chris Shays, Member of the United States Congress from Connecticut

1945 - Huell Howser, American TV host

1945 - Yıldo, Turkish famous showman and football player

1946 - James Robert Baker, American novelist, screenwriter

1946 - Howard Shore, Canadian film composer

1946 - Frank Beamer, American football coach Virginia Tech Hokies football

1947 - Job Cohen, Dutch politician, mayor of Amsterdam

1947 - Joe Morton, American actor

1947 - Laura Nyro, American singer and songwriter (d. 1997)

1947 - Paul Chuckle, British comedian

1948 - Ntozake Shange, American author

1949 - Joe Egan, British musician (Stealers Wheel)

1949 - George Hendrick, baseball player

1949 - Gary Richrath, American musician (REO Speedwagon)

1950 - Om Puri, Indian actor

1950 - Wendy Wasserstein, American playwright (d. 2006)

1950 - Sheila White, English actress

1951 - Mike Antonovich, American ice hockey player and executive

1951 - Terry McMillan, American author

1951 - Pam Dawber, American actress

1952 - Patrick Morrow, Canadian mountaineer, first to complete the Seven Summits

1952 - Bảo Ninh, Vietnamese novelist

1952 - Jerry Royster, American baseball player

1954 - Liz Burch, Australian actress

1954 - Arliss Howard, American actor

1955 - Timmy Mallett, British TV presenter

1955 - David Twohy, American movie director and screenwriter

1955 - Rita Verdonk, Dutch politician

1955 - Vanessa Briscoe Hay, American singer and songwriter (Pylon (band) & Supercluster)

1956 - Martina Navrátilová, Czech-born tennis player

1956 - Craig Bartlett, American animator

1956 - Jim Talent, American politician

1957 - Doug Isaacson, Alaskan politician

1957 - Catherine Ringer, French singer and songwriter (Les Rita Mitsouko)

1958 - Corinne Bohrer, American actress

1958 - Thomas Hearns, American boxer

1958 - Kjell Samuelsson, National Hockey League defenseman

1959 - Kirby Chambliss, Aerobatic pilot and Red Bull Air Racer

1959 - Milčo Mančevski, Macedonian film director and screenwriter

1959 - John Nord, former American pro wrestler

1959 - Chris "Mad Dog" Russo, American sports talk show host

1959 - Steve Swayne, Dartmouth Professor

1960 - Jean-Claude Van Damme, Belgian actor

1960 - Erin Moran, American actress

1961 - Wynton Marsalis, American jazz musician

1961 - Rick Moody, American author

1962 - Vincent Spano, American actor

1964 - Dan Lilker, American musician, bassist for Anthrax, S.O.D., Nuclear Assault, and Brutal Truth

1964 - Charles Stross, British speculative-fiction author

1965 - Curtis Stigers, American jazz vocalist and saxophonist.

1965 - Zakir Naik, Indian Islamic speaker and doctor.

1966 - Slavi Trifonov, Bulgarian showman

1969 - Nelson Vivas, Argentine former footballer

1970 - José Padilla, American former gang member and alleged supporter of terrorism

1970 - Doug Mirabelli, American baseball player

1972 - Alex Tagliani, Quebec racing driver

1972 - Jake Farrow, actor

1973 - Michalis Kapsis, Greek footballer

1974 - Robbie Savage, Welsh footballer

1974 - Peter Svensson, Swedish musician (The Cardigans)

1974 - Candy Lo, Hong Kong singer-songwriter and actress

1975 - Alex Cora, Puerto Rican baseball player

1976 - Azlea Antistia, American pornographic actress

1976 - Zhou Xun, Chinese actress and singer

1977 - Ryan Nelsen, New Zealand footballer

1977 - David Vuillemin, Pro Motocross Rider

1978 - Wesley Jonathan, American actor

1978 - Mike Tindall, English rugby union player

1978 - Jyothika Saravanan, Indian actress popular in Tamil

1978 - Priyanka Trivedi, Indian actress

1981 - Greg Warren, American football player

1982 - Ne-Yo, R&B singer

1984 - Lindsey Vonn, American alpine skier

1984 - Freida Pinto, Indian actress and model

1987 - Zac Efron, American actor

1987 - Freja Beha Erichsen, Danish model

1990 - Carly Schroeder, American actress

1991 - Tyler Posey, American actor

1998 - Julia Wróblewska, Polish actress

2001 - Annelise Manojlovic, English actress *

What are the math references in Alice in Wonderland?

In Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, there aren't mathematical symbols as such, but there arereferences to mathematical ideas and concepts.

Wikipedia gives some examples. (See Related Links below)

Character sketch of gulliver from the novel gulliver travels?

Although Gulliver is a bold adventurer who visits a multitude of strange lands, it is difficult to regard him as truly heroic. Even well before his slide into misanthropy at the end of the book, he simply does not show the stuff of which grand heroes are made. He is not cowardly-on the contrary, he undergoes the unnerving experiences of nearly being devoured by a giant rat, taken captive by pirates, shipwrecked on faraway shores, sexually assaulted by an eleven-year-old girl, and shot in the face with poison arrows. Additionally, the isolation from humanity that he endures for sixteen years must be hard to bear, though Gulliver rarely talks about such matters. Yet despite the courage Gulliver shows throughout his voyages, his character lacks basic greatness. This impression could be due to the fact that he rarely shows his feelings, reveals his soul, or experiences great passions of any sort. But other literary adventurers, like Odysseus in Homer's Odyssey, seem heroic without being particularly open about their emotions. What seems most lacking in Gulliver is not courage or feelings, but drive. One modern critic has described Gulliver as possessing the smallest will in all of Western literature: he is simply devoid of a sense of mission, a goal that would make his wandering into a quest. Odysseus's goal is to get home again, Aeneas's goal in Virgil's Aeneid is to found Rome, but Gulliver's goal on his sea voyage is uncertain. He says that he needs to make some money after the failure of his business, but he rarely mentions finances throughout the work and indeed almost never even mentions home. He has no awareness of any greatness in what he is doing or what he is working toward. In short, he has no aspirations. When he leaves home on his travels for the first time, he gives no impression that he regards himself as undertaking a great endeavor or embarking on a thrilling new challenge. We may also note Gulliver's lack of ingenuity and savvy. Other great travelers, such as Odysseus, get themselves out of dangerous situations by exercising their wit and ability to trick others. Gulliver seems too dull for any battles of wit and too unimaginative to think up tricks, and thus he ends up being passive in most of the situations in which he finds himself. He is held captive several times throughout his voyages, but he is never once released through his own stratagems, relying instead on chance factors for his liberation. Once presented with a way out, he works hard to escape, as when he repairs the boat he finds that delivers him from Blefuscu, but he is never actively ingenious in attaining freedom. This example summarizes quite well Gulliver's intelligence, which is factual and practical rather than imaginative or introspective. Gulliver is gullible, as his name suggests. For example, he misses the obvious ways in which the Lilliputians exploit him. While he is quite adept at navigational calculations and the humdrum details of seafaring, he is far less able to reflect on himself or his nation in any profoundly critical way. Traveling to such different countries and returning to England in between each voyage, he seems poised to make some great anthropological speculations about cultural differences around the world, about how societies are similar despite their variations or different despite their similarities. But, frustratingly, Gulliver gives us nothing of the sort. He provides us only with literal facts and narrative events, never with any generalizing or philosophizing. He is a self-hating, self-proclaimed Yahoo at the end, announcing his misanthropy quite loudly, but even this attitude is difficult to accept as the moral of the story. Gulliver is not a figure with whom we identify but, rather, part of the array of personalities and behaviors about which we must make judgments.

What does notebook mean?

The major ones are common nouns, proper nouns, abstract nouns, possessive nouns, and collective nouns.

What piece of technology does Faber give montag and why?

Faber gives Montag a small earpiece that allows them to communicate without being detected. Faber gives Montag this device so that he can guide him and help him navigate the dangerous environment in which he finds himself.

How do CPU transfer data from input to output?

While the computer is running, the CPU runs atomic instructions which are read from harddisk into memory (RAM), and which each manipulate a small piece of data. In accumulation these instructions lead to the result of the apparent connection of input (for example, typing the keyboard) to output (for example, displaying stuff on screen). The atomic instructions used are somewhat different for each CPU, but common desktop PCs use extensions of the x86 instruction set.

see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X86_instruction_set

What key is Stranger on the Shore written in?

Stranger on the Shore by Acker Bilk is in the key of F.

What is the monitor passwords for accelerated reader?

I'm unable to provide specific monitor passwords for Accelerated Reader as it could vary depending on the school or organization. I recommend reaching out to your school's administrator or librarian for the appropriate password.

What are the figure of speech falling in love?

"Falling in love" is a metaphor, comparing the experience of developing romantic feelings for someone to the physical act of falling. It suggests a sense of losing control or surrendering to intense emotions.

Who said poetry is an ancient technology?

Poet and writer Margaret Atwood is often quoted as saying "poetry is an ancient technology" to emphasize the enduring power and relevance of poetry throughout human history. This phrase highlights the idea that poetry has been a creative and communicative tool for expressing complex emotions and experiences since ancient times.

Is English subject imorptant to IT students?

Yes, English is important for IT students as it can help them effectively communicate with clients, colleagues, and other stakeholders in a global industry. Strong English skills can also enhance their ability to understand technical documentation, participate in international collaborations, and present their ideas clearly.

Why digital native are differ from previous generation?

Digital natives, typically referring to individuals born into the digital age, differ from previous generations because they have grown up surrounded by technology like smartphones and the internet from a young age. As a result, they tend to be more comfortable with and reliant on technology for communication, information, and entertainment. This can lead to differences in how they interact with and perceive the world compared to older generations who may have adapted to technology later in life.

What were the benefits of investment in new technologies?

These new technology investments resulted in a boost in productivity and lower unit costs of production as the number of employees in the industry declined from 9,759 in 1997 to 5,434 in 2000.

How do poets compress their meaning in poems?

The art of apprehending and interpreting ideas by the faculty of imagination; the art of idealizing in thought and in expression., Imaginative language or composition, whether expressed rhythmically or in prose. Specifically: Metrical composition; verse; rhyme; poems collectively; as, heroic poetry; dramatic poetry; lyric or Pindaric poetry.

What is a word for hard to define?

nebulous : as recanted in Justified season one episode 6 The Collection :)

ambiguous

indefinite

indistinct

vague

unclear

While it doesn't seem hard to define, try and define the word "between" without using it in your definition. It's nearly impossible.

How can you compare and contrast science and technology?

Science is raw knowledge about the natural world and the methodology of pursuing that knowledge.

Technology is how you choose to apply that knowledge.


Thus, understanding semi-conductors and the forces governing their behavior is science.
Using that knowledge to make logic gates from semi-conductors is technology.

What does ''The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world'' mean?

This phrase means that those who influence and nurture individuals, such as mothers or caregivers, have great power and impact over the future. It emphasizes the importance of raising and educating children, as they are the future leaders of the world.