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Hollywood And Computer Animation
... has been created
and manipulated with computers. Viewers are witnessing the results of all this
in the form of stories and experiences that they never dreamed of before.
Perhaps the most surprising aspect of all this, however, is that the entire
digital effects and animation industry is still in its infancy. The future
looks bright. How It Was
In the beginning, computer graphics were as cumbersome and as hard to control as
dinosaurs must have been in their own time. Like dinosaurs, the hardware
systems, or muscles, of early computer graphics were huge and ungainly. The
machines often filled entire buildings.
Also like dinosaurs, the software programs or brai ...
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The Cuckoo's Egg: Cliff's Persistence
... The Lab becomes suspicious that it might be a hacker.
To fill you in who Seventek is, he is a computer guru that created a number of
programs for the Berkeley UNIX system. At the time, he was in England far from
computers and civilization. The crew does not what to believe that it would be
Seventek, so they start to look what the impostor is doing. Cliff hooks up a
few computers to the line that comes from the Tymnet. Tymnet is a series of
fiber-optic cables that run from a major city to another major city. So if you
were in LA and wanted to hook up to a computer in the Big Apple you could call
long distance, have a lot of interference from other callers and ...
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Coping With Computers
... newer
college graduates in today's computer world. This article deals with the
feelings of one particular person in this position.
Linda Ellerbee, a journalist and author owns a television production
company. She also has her own column in Windows magazine. Her experiences with
modern computer technologies range from the terminals of the 1970's all the
through today with the Internet and e-mail.
One of her first experiences with a computer involved sending a message
over the AP news wire. As it turns out, she expressed her candid opinion on
some very sensitive topics at the time, including but not limited to the Vietnam
War. Consequently, the AP was not amuse ...
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Changes From Technology
... about it
again. What is going to happen to good 'ole Joe? And those nice librarians, what
about them? Will they be out of a job? Will they be forced to operate computers
that are foreign to them? How do we as a society adjust to technological change?
The answer lies in society's ability to effectively measure the costs and
benefits of technological change.
The rapid growth of technology brings with it a massive amount of hope,
but also despair. Kids are growing up with computers. They are learning more and
faster than other generations could. This is wonderful, right? Maybe not. Will
computers deplete the social skills kids need to mature? Will being a member of
A ...
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Technology Changes Role Of Database Administrator
... job was to oversee any and all database-oriented tasks. This
included database design and implementation, installation, upgrade, SQL
analysis and advice for application developers.. The DBA was also responsible
for back-up and recovery, which required many complex utility programs that run
in a specified order. This was a time-consuming energy draining task. (Fosdick
1995)
Databases are currently in the process of integration. Standardizing data,
once done predominately by large corporations, is now filtering down to medium-
size and small companies. The meshing of the old and new database causes
administrators to maintain two or three database product ...
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Computer Aided Drafting And Design
... 1/10 of a millimetre in actual space. Then 1 millimetre is
10 co-ordinate points.
CADD systems were developed along with the computer. They were
developed very slowly. They went from being very large, clumsy, elaborate
machines which needed lots of human intervention to one program on a floppy
disk. When the power of computers increased, so did the possibilities of
CADD.
Images on CADD systems are drawn with the aid of a keyboard, mouse, or
tracking ball. One selects the starting point of a line, the ending point,
and the line is drawn. A scale at the bottom of the screen tells how long
the line will be. On some CADD systems, the computer it ...
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The History Of The Internet
... idea for this great network of computers sprung
forth from a question "How could U.S. authorities successfully communicate after
a nuclear war?" The answer came from the Rand Corporation, America's foremost
Cold War think-tank. Why not create a network of computers without one central
main authoritative unit (Sterling 1) The Rand Corporation working along side the
U.S. Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) devised a plan. The network
itself would be considered unreliable at all times; therefore it would never
become too dependable and powerful. Each computer on the network or node would
have its own authority to originate, pass, and receive messages. ...
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Optical Storage Mediums
... - the color of the light we use. An optical medium
typically involves some sort of laser, for laser light does not diverge, so we
can pinpoint it to a specific place on the disk. By moving the laser a little
bit, we can change tracks on a disk, and this movement is very small, usually
less than a hairÕs width. This allows one to store an immense amount of data on
one disk. The light does not touch the disk surface, thereby not creating
friction, which leads to wear, so the life of an average optical disk is far
longer than that of a magnetic medium. Also, it is impossible to ÒcrashÓ an
optical disk (in the same sense as crashing a hard drive), since there i ...
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Windows NT Vs Unix As An Operating System
... of the Bell Labs researchers (Ken Thompson) then decided to rewrite a
stripped down version of MULTICS, initially as a hobby. He used a PDP-7
minicomputer that no was using and wrote the code in assembly. It was initially
a stripped down, single user version of MULTICS but Thompson actually got the
system to work and one of his colleagues jokingly called it UNICS (UNiplexed
Information and Computing Service). The name stuck but the spelling was later
changed to UNIX. Soon Thompson was joined on the project by Dennis Richie and
later by his entire department.
UNIX was moved from the now obsolete PDP-7 to the much more modern PDP-11/20 and
then later to th ...
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Censorship Of The Internet And The Tyranny Of Our Government
... to the
users to decide what is broadcast. Most importantly, censorship of the
Internet impairs the expression of ideas and infringes against the First
Amendment of the Constitution.
First of all, censoring the Internet as a whole is not possible, so
why even try? Cyberspace is the most decentralized form of communication
today making policing the Internet a virtually futile task. Unlike
television or radio, the Internet consists of thousands of individual
computers and networks, with thousands of speakers, information providers
and information users, and no centralized distribution point (ACLU vs. Reno
Brief 1). No guards watch to see who goes where and if that ...
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