PCs - PC Devices
Return to PC, Microsoft Surface Devices, Cloud Monk Computers, Cloud Monk Home Lab, Cloud Monk Library
- Cloud Monk Home Lab of 117 “Computers” has 16 PCs with a mixture of Windows Server 2022-2019-2016, Windows 10, Windows 11, Windows 95 and DOS 6.22 (Vintage PCs), Linux (RHEL-Rocky-Fedora, Ubuntu-Linux Mint-Debian, FreeBSD): Qty 1 128 GB Intel i9 home built ASUS Mobo PC, Qty 4 of Microsoft Surface Devices, Qty 7 of Intel NUCs, 4 Laptop PC's. (navbar_my_pcs)
- Snippet from Wikipedia: Personal computer
A personal computer, often referred to as a PC, is a computer designed for individual use. It is typically used for tasks such as word processing, internet browsing, email, multimedia playback, and gaming. Personal computers are intended to be operated directly by an end user, rather than by a computer expert or technician. Unlike large, costly minicomputers and mainframes, time-sharing by many people at the same time is not used with personal computers. The term home computer has also been used, primarily in the late 1970s and 1980s. The advent of personal computers and the concurrent Digital Revolution have significantly affected the lives of people.
Institutional or corporate computer owners in the 1960s had to write their own programs to do any useful work with computers. While personal computer users may develop their applications, usually these systems run commercial software, free-of-charge software ("freeware"), which is most often proprietary, or free and open-source software, which is provided in ready-to-run, or binary form. Software for personal computers is typically developed and distributed independently from the hardware or operating system manufacturers. Many personal computer users no longer need to write their programs to make any use of a personal computer, although end-user programming is still feasible. This contrasts with mobile systems, where software is often available only through a manufacturer-supported channel, and end-user program development may be discouraged by lack of support by the manufacturer.
Since the early 1990s, Microsoft operating systems (first with MS-DOS and then with Windows) and Intel hardware – collectively called Wintel – have dominated the personal computer market, and today the term PC normally refers to the ubiquitous Wintel platform. Alternatives to Windows occupy a minority share of the market; these include the Mac platform from Apple (running the macOS operating system), and free and open-source, Unix-like operating systems, such as Linux. Other notable platforms until the 1990s were the Amiga from Commodore, and the PC-98 from NEC.
Computer Hardware: - Cloud Monk Home Lab, Intel Spy Chip, Intel Corporation Spooks, Hardware, History of computing hardware (1960s–present), CPU-Benchmark.org, Computer Architecture, Hardware Architecture (64 Bit Architecture - 32 Bit Architecture (IA32), ARM (ARM64 - ARM32), Intel Architecture (x64, ia64 - x32, ia32), Apple Silicon), Hardware Engineering; CPU - Microprocessors - Central processing unit (CPU) and Microprocessor, CPU Manufacturers: Intel processors, AMD processors, Apple processors, IBM processors - IBM mainframe processors, 64-bit computing - 64-bit. (navbar_hardware - see also navbar_software, navbar_computer_science, navbar_cpu, navbar_hardware_architectures)
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