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Fotografia Rui Pinheiro IPP|GCM

A photo about the topic Cloud Computing.

The boy loves gadgets. He likes phones, remote controls, game controllers, digital cameras, stereos, cell phones, you name it. So, I pulled the old iMac keyboard out of the dust bin in the basement and gave it to him.

Repro Free Wednesday 30th May 2018. Final year Computing students showcase their work to 100 companies and academic peers at National College of Ireland. 2018 marks the 20th anniversary of NCI’s School of Computing. Picture Jason Clarke

Event Title:Retro Computing

Speaker:Plymouth University/BCS South West

Event Date:21 November 2011, 19:00

Event Location:Sherwell Conference Centre, Plymouth University

soon they will rule the world

Students raced to compute their math problems quickly and win the Math Triathlon!

Cloud computing is a computer-based service that enables shared computer processing resources and data across separate entities, often via the Internet. The user does not need to own, manage, or maintain the hardware on which the software is running, and can access their data from any location with internet access.

jeetechacademy.com/cloud-computing-course/

A ridiculous day of computing.

 

10 points to whoever can tell me what I am doing and why (radryan excluded)

International Symposium on Grid Computing 2008 Howard hotel

Daily photo for September 15, 2009

At The National Museum of Computing www.tnmoc.org at Bletchley Park, on a trip with Sarah, Jenny and Stephen AKA Spacedog.

Repro Free Wednesday 30th May 2018. Final year Computing students showcase their work to 100 companies and academic peers at National College of Ireland. 2018 marks the 20th anniversary of NCI’s School of Computing. Pictured is Amanda Anicete of EnCapsulate. Picture Jason Clarke

Animation shots from computing students

At The National Museum of Computing www.tnmoc.org at Bletchley Park, on a trip with Sarah, Jenny and Stephen AKA Spacedog.

Keypad detail of a mechanical card punch at the National Museum of Computing, Bletchley Park. And yes, it goes up to eleven.

Russell is crunching some numbers in his personal desktop computer.

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