Computer
A computer is a machine for manipulating
data according to a list of instructions known as a program.
Computers are extremely versatile. In fact, they are universal
information-processing machines. According to the
Church–Turing thesis, a computer with a certain minimum
threshold capability is in principle capable of performing the
tasks of any other computer. Therefore, computers with
capabilities ranging from those of a personal digital
assistant to a supercomputer may all perform the same tasks,
as long as time and memory capacity are not considerations.
Therefore, the same computer designs may be adapted for tasks
ranging from processing company payrolls to controlling
unmanned spaceflights. Due to technological advancement,
modern electronic computers are exponentially more capable
than those of preceding generations (a phenomenon partially
described by Moore's Law).
Computers take numerous physical forms. Early electronic
computers were the size of a large room, while entire modern
embedded computers may be smaller than a deck of playing
cards. Even today, enormous computing facilities still exist
for specialized scientific computation and for the transaction
processing requirements of large organizations. Smaller
computers designed for individual use are called personal
computers. Along with its portable equivalent, the laptop
computer, the personal computer is the ubiquitous information
processing and communication tool, and is usually what is
meant by "a computer". However, the most common form of
computer in use today is the embedded computer. Embedded
computers are usually relatively simple and physically small
computers used to control another device. They may control
machines from fighter aircraft to industrial robots to digital
cameras.
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