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61 computer
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62 Computer
[kɔm’pju:tə] m; -s, -; EDV computer; am Computer arbeiten / spielen work / play on a computer; am Computer sitzen sit at ( oder in front of) a computer; es läuft über Computer it’s all computerized ( oder done by computer)* * *der Computercomputer* * *Com|pu|ter [kɔm'pjuːtɐ]m -s, -computerauf Computer — on computer
sich mit Computern auskennen — to be computer-literate
* * *(a usually large electronic machine capable of storing and processing large amounts of information and of performing calculations: The whole process is done by computer; PC means `personal computer'; a computer game; a computer program.) computer* * *Com·pu·ter<-s, ->[kɔmˈpju:tɐ]m computeram \Computer arbeiten to work at the computerden \Computer programmieren to program the computer[etw] auf \Computer umstellen to computerize [sth]* * *der; Computers, Computer: computerauf Computer (Akk.) umstellen — computerize
* * *am Computer arbeiten/spielen work/play on a computer;am Computer sitzen sit at ( oder in front of) a computer;* * *der; Computers, Computer: computerauf Computer (Akk.) umstellen — computerize
* * *- m.computer n. -
63 computer
m invar computerassistito dal computer computer-assistedcomputer portatile portable (computer), laptop* * ** * *[kom'pjuter]sostantivo maschile invariabile computermettere qcs. su computer — to put sth. on computer, to feed sth. into computer
computer palmare — hand-held o palmtop computer
computer portatile — laptop, notebook
* * *computer/kom'pjuter/m.inv.computer; mettere qcs. su computer to put sth. on computer, to feed sth. into computer; computer da tavolo desktop (computer); computer palmare hand-held o palmtop computer; computer portatile laptop, notebook. -
64 Computer
A computer is an interpreted automatic formal system-that is to say, a symbol- manipulating machine. (Haugeland, 1985, p. 113)The game the computer plays out is regulated by systems of ideas whose range is bounded only by the limitations of the human imagination. The physically determined bounds on the electronic and mechanical events internal to the computer do not matter for that game-any more than it matters how tightly a chess player grips his bishop or how rapidly he moves it over the board. A computer running under the control of a stored program is thus detached from the real world in the same way that every abstract game is. (Weizenbaum, 1976, pp. 111-112)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Computer
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65 computer
حَاسِب آلي \ computer: a large machine for calculating or storing facts and figures. \ رتّابَة \ computer. \ See Also نظامة (نَظَّامة)، حاسوب \ عَقْل إِلِكْترُونِيّ \ computer: a large machine for calculating or storing facts and figures. \ See Also حاسوب \ كُمْبيُوتَر \ computer: a large machine for calculating or storing facts and figures. \ See Also حاسوب \ نَظّامة \ computer. -
66 computer sm inv
[kəm'pjuːtər] -
67 Computer
Com·pu·ter <-s, -> [kɔmʼpju:tɐ] mcomputer;den \Computer programmieren to program the computer;[etw] auf \Computer umstellen to computerize [sth] -
68 computer
sm inv [kəm'pjuːtər] -
69 computer
[kəmˈpjuːtə] nounan electronic machine capable of storing and processing large amounts of information and of performing calculations:PC means "personal computer"
حاسوب، عقل الكتروني(كومبيوتر)a computer program.
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70 computer-aided manufacturing
Opsa system in which the manufacture and assembly of a product are directed by a computer. Computer-aided manufacturing can be integrated with computer-aided design to create a CAD/CAM system.Abbr. CAM.The ultimate business dictionary > computer-aided manufacturing
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71 computer telephony integration
Gen Mgtthe combining of computer and telephone technology to allow a computer to dial telephone numbers, route calls, and send and receive messages. One product of computer telephony integration is the process of calling line identification, or CLI. CLI identifies the telephone number a customer is calling from, searches the customer database to identify the caller, and pops up the customer account on the receiver’s computer screen, using the facility known as screen popping, before the call is answered.Abbr. CTIThe ultimate business dictionary > computer telephony integration
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72 Computer Psychometrics
The computer is changing most aspects of [psychological] testing, bringing benefits and costs. Automation of test administration and interpretation is gaining ground, although it tends to reduce interaction between assessor and examinee-with consequent impoverishment of information on both sides. Supplying computer-generated "self-interpreting" reports to clients seems likely to invite misunderstanding, and to encourage overreliance on the test as authority. Persons not qualified as test interpreters are writing software for start-up companies in the field; the risks are obvious. On the positive side, if the computer is kept in an adjunct role it reduces testing costs, and its reports stimulate thought in the professional interpreter. Adaptive testing is paying off, and we are beginning to see new tasks, resembling video arcade displays, which have obvious potential. (Cronbach, 1990, p. xxiii)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Computer Psychometrics
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73 computer
sg - compúteren, pl - compútereкомпью́тер м* * ** * *(en -e) computer ( fx feed all the answers into a computer). -
74 computer
subst. computer (personlig computer) personal computer, PC -
75 computer-aided design
Opsthe use of a computer to assist with the design of a product. Computer graphics, modeling, and simulation are used to represent a product on screen, so that designers can produce more accurate drawings than is possible on paper alone and to perform calculations easily, thereby optimizing designs for production. -
76 computer-aided engineering
Opsthe application of computers to the generation of the engineering specifications of a product. Computer-aided engineering fits into the production process between computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing. It is similar to CAD/CAM software, but with a focus on the engineering processes required for converting a design to a manufacturable product. The software package can include aspects of design, analysis, process planning, numerical control, mold and tool design, and quality control.Abbr. CAEThe ultimate business dictionary > computer-aided engineering
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77 Computer Metaphors
Within the AI community there is a growing dissatisfaction concerning the adequacy of sequential models to simulate the cognitive processes....For an example of the dissimilarity between computers and nervous systems, consider that in conventional computers... each piece of data [is] located in its own special space in the memory bank [and] can be retrieved only by a central processor that knows the address in the memory bank for each datum. Human memory appears to be organized along entirely different lines. For one thing, from a partial or a degraded stimulus human memory can "reconstruct" the rest, and there are associative relationships among stored pieces of information based on considerations of context rather than on considerations of location.... t now appears doubtful that individual neurons are so specific that they are tuned to respond to a single item and nothing else. Thus, connectionist models tend to devise and use distributed principles, which means that elements may be selective to a range of stimuli and there are no "grandmother cells."...Information storage, it appears, is in some ill-defined sense a function of connectivity among sets of neurons. This implies that there is something fundamentally wrong in understanding the brain's memory on the model of individual symbols stored at unique addresses in a data bank....A further source of misgivings about the computer metaphor concerns real-time constraints. Although the signal velocities in nervous systems are quite slow in comparison to those in computers, brains are nonetheless far, far faster than electronic devices in the execution of their complex tasks. For example, human brains are incomparably faster than any computer in word-nonword recognition tasks. (P. S. Churchland, 1986, pp. 458-459)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Computer Metaphors
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78 Computer-Aided Planning
n < prod> (von Arbeitsabläufen in der Fertigungsvorbereitung) ■ computer-aided production planning (CAP); computer-aided production scheduling rareGerman-english technical dictionary > Computer-Aided Planning
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79 Computer-Aided Production Planning
n (CAP) < prod> (von Arbeitsabläufen in der Fertigungsvorbereitung) ■ computer-aided production planning (CAP); computer-aided production scheduling rareGerman-english technical dictionary > Computer-Aided Production Planning
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80 Computer-Aided Translation
f (CAT) < transl> ■ computer-aided translation (CAT); computer-assisted translationGerman-english technical dictionary > Computer-Aided Translation
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