Subj : The record shop. Jargon To : Denis Mosko From : Dallas Hinton Date : Thu Apr 16 2020 10:10:08 Hi Denis -- on Apr 16 2020 at 17:26, you wrote: DM> The first thing John Jackson did was to ask some friends who owned DM> their own computers about what sort of computer to get. The first DM> person he talked to summarized it by saying: DM> 'You need at least 2Gb of RAM with *twin USB-drives* and DM> *laser-printer* with associated software'. A second friend said: DM> 'What you need is a *64-bit* machine with *VDU*, *hard-drive* and *daisy-wheel* attached'. DM> At this point John went awaynpt undestanding a word, and almost gave up hope. DM> TASK. Explain each of the *emphasized* words above in simple DM> language in a sentence, to show the meaning of each. Twin USB-drives. A USB drive is also called a thumb drive. Twinning them simply means have 2 slots for such a drive. Modern computers typically have anywhere from 4 to 10 slots. A laser printer is a type of printer using a heated drum to attract and then deposit very fine ink particles on the page. The heat then fuses these particles to form a very sharp image, whether text or photo. A 64 bit machine is one that operates on 64 bit of data at once. Windows7 and later are 64 bit operating systems. A VDU is a video display unit -- what we call a monitor. A hard-drive is a device for storing data encoded onto a metallic disk via a magnetic process. Technically, only a spinning disk is a hard-drive but we use the term to include Solid-state drives as well. And before you ask, a solid-state drive is simply a USB drive in a different physical shape. A daisy-wheel was a type of printer that used a typewriter ribbon and a spinning (daisy-wheel) disk. The disk was spun until the desired character was in place, then struck through the ribbon onto the paper. They were soon replaced by the dot-matrix printer, which then gave way to the laser printer. Cheers... Dallas --- timEd/NT 1.30+ * Origin: The BandMaster, Vancouver, CANADA (1:153/7715) .