COMPUTER.CA and
COMPUTERS.CA are Canadian computer stores
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COMPUTER
- A personal computer (PC) is a computer whose original sales
price, size, and capabilities make it useful for individuals, intended to be
operated directly by an end user, with no intervening computer operator.
A PC may be a
home computer, or may be found in an
office, often connected to a local area network. The distinguishing
characteristics are that the computer is primarily used, interactively, by
one person at a time.
This is opposite to the batch processing or
time-sharing models which allowed large expensive systems to be used by many
people, usually at the same time, or large data processing systems which
required a full-time staff to operate efficiently.
The capabilities of the PC have changed greatly since the introduction of
electronic computers.
By the early 1970s, people in academic or
research institutions had the opportunity for single-person use of a
computer system in interactive mode for extended durations, although these
systems would still have been too expensive to be owned by a single person.
The introduction of the microprocessor, a single chip with all the circuitry
that formerly occupied large cabinets, led to the proliferation of personal
computers after about 1975.
Early personal computers generally called
microcomputers, sold often in kit form and in limited volumes, and were of
interest mostly to hobbyists and technicians. By the late 1970s, mass-market
pre-assembled computers allowed a wider range of people to use computers,
focusing more on software applications and less on development of the
processor hardware. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, home computers were
developed for household use, offering personal productivity, programming and
games.
Somewhat larger and more expensive systems
(although still low-cost compared with minicomputers and mainframes) were
aimed for office and small business use. Workstations are characterized by
high-performance processors and graphics displays, with large local disk
storage, networking capability, and running under a multitasking operating
system. Workstations are still used for tasks such as computer-aided design,
drafting and modelling, computation-intensive scientific and engineering
calculations, image processing, architectural modelling, and computer
graphics for animation and motion picture visual effects.
Eventually the market segments lost any technical distinction; business
computers acquired color graphics capacity and sound, and home computers and
game systems used the same processors and operating systems as office-bound
computers. Mass-market computers had graphics and memory comparable to
dedicated workstations of a few years before. Even local area networking,
originally a way to allow business computers to share expensive mass storage
and peripherals, became a standard feature of a home computer.
Today a PC may be a desktop computer, a laptop computer, or a tablet
computer. The most common operating systems are Microsoft Windows, Mac OS
and Linux, while the most common microprocessors are the x86 and PowerPC
CPUs. Software applications for personal computers include word processing,
spreadsheets, games, and a myriad of personal productivity and
special-purpose software. Modern personal computers often have high-speed or
dial-up connections to the Internet, allowing access to the World Wide Web
and a wide range of other resources. While early PCs owners usually had to
write their own programs to do anything useful with the machines, today's
users have access to a wide range of commercial and free software which is
easily installed. The coming convergence of larger devices and the Personal
Digital Assistants (PDAs), mobile phone and wearable computer markets which
have similar functions, operating systems and even the same components, will
decide if personal computer will refer to these devices.
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