You are bad at computers if you do not score at least 7/10 on this test

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You are bad at computers if you do not score at least 7/10 on this test

Bad, Computers, Score, Test

news hardware You are bad at computers if you do not score at least 7/10 on this test

Sunday evening: the weekend is coming to an end and we hope it was good! So that you can test your knowledge in a relaxed manner, we have put together a questionnaire on the subject of computing in the broadest sense.

“Computing”: The term is so broad that it is difficult to know where to begin. It is omnipresent today: in everyday working life, in our free time… It is simply impossible to imagine life without it. For this quiz, however, we have decided to propose front questions that are “computer” oriented. If you are a mobility specialist (smartphone, tablet…) you may not be in the right place.

And by the way, where does the term “computing” actually come from? This “science of automated calculation” can go back very far and we can even recall the “Pascaline”, a calculating machine invented by Blaise Pascal in 1642. We’re still a long way from computers, but we already have a concept. Then, in 1801, thanks to the punch cards invented by Joseph Marie Jacquard, we can think of the programmable mechanical loom.

Pioneers… but also pioneers

However, we can say that the foundations of “modern” computing were laid just before the Second World War thanks to the English mathematician Alan Turing, who came up with a concept of a universal machine capable of performing calculations using an algorithm. A few years later, in the 1950s, the introduction of the first printed circuit boards will lead to computers becoming a bit more compact, reliable and efficient.

France is not to be outdone, particularly with the scientist Marion Créhange, who in 1961 was the first to propose a doctoral thesis on computer programming. This pioneer left us at the beginning of April at the age of 85. Women have also played an important role in the development of computing technology, particularly with Ada Lovelace (first person to imagine a “computer program in the 19th century, imagined a wireless communication system, the ancestor of our WiFi, in the 1940s.

Check out our quiz!

Jiikaa profile, iGamesNews

par jiikaaJournalist igamesnews.com

MP

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