Description of your home town
My hometown is a small town in the north of Namangan called Uychi. There is a small industrial zone in the town. It is in the middle of a big agricultural area.
Namangan is a city in eastern Uzbekistan, on the northern edge of the Fergana Valley, about 430 km east of Tashkent, about 65 km west of Andijan, and about 75 km north of Fergana. The Koradaryo and Naryn rivers join together to form the Syr Darya just outside the southern edge of the city.
It’s not polluted or noisy, just the usual smells and sounds of rural life! There is a traditional market in the centre of town twice a week but there are no large shopping malls.
A computer system
A computer system is an electronic system consists of many parts works together to make the computer work. Computers work mainly to perform a specific task given by the user.
In a desktop computer, there are three parts of the computer such as input unit (keyboard and mouse), output unit (monitor and printer), and system unit (rectangular box).
In a laptop, all the parts of a computer are embedded on a single place. Hence, it is easy to carry them from one place to another place. Instead of using mouse, we use touch pad in laptops.
Generally, a computer system consists of four important components:
• Input unit
• CPU (Central Processing Unit)
• Output unit
• Memory unit
Brief history of computer industry
The computer was born not for entertainment or email but out of a need to solve a serious number-crunching crisis. By 1880, the U.S. population had grown so large that it took more than seven years to tabulate the U.S. Census results. The government sought a faster way to get the job done, giving rise to punch-card based computers that took up entire rooms.
Today, we carry more computing power on our smartphones than was available in these early models. The following brief history of computing is a timeline of how computers evolved from their humble beginnings to the machines of today that surf the Internet, play games and stream multimedia in addition to crunching numbers.
The brain the most powerful computer in the Universe
I keep seeing references to the human brain being “the most powerful computer in the world” (as well as sometimes “the most complex thing in the universe” – how would we know?). But is the human brain really more complex, or more powerful than that of the other primates or great whales etc? The human brain differs from them of course (as, indeed, they differ from each other) but is it actually any more complex?
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