Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A Bluetooth keyboard is a wireless keyboard that connects and communicates with its parent device via the Bluetooth protocol.These devices are widely used with portable devices such as smart phones and tablets, though they are also used with laptops and ultrabooks.
Devices that rely on 3G, including old smartphones, some medical and security alarms, some car navigation and entertainment services, and old tablets and e-readers, stopped working by the end of 2022.
Google Desktop was a computer program with desktop search capabilities, created by Google for Linux, Apple Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows systems. It allowed text searches of a user's email messages, computer files, music, photos, chats, web pages viewed, and the ability to display "Google Gadgets" on the user's desktop in a sidebar.
OLPC XO-1 laptop in e-book mode. The XO-1 is designed to be low-cost, small, durable, and efficient. It is shipped with a slimmed-down version of Fedora Linux and a custom GUI named Sugar that is intended to help young children collaborate.
Input to the device comes from a keyboard displayed on the multi-touch screen or by voice-to-text by speaking into the microphone. Entered text is supported by predictive and suggestion software; there is a multi-language spell-checker which recognizes many regional accents of different languages.
Further issues were discovered upon the launch of the Anniversary Update ("Redstone"), including a bug that caused some devices to freeze (but addressed by cumulative update KB3176938, released on August 31, 2016), [338] [339] and that fundamental changes to how Windows handles webcams had caused many to stop working.
Alice: If you are working on, or have access to, an Apple Macintosh running Mac OS X, and which also has a copy of Word (perhaps your local library or uny computer lab?), it's easy: Open the file up with Word on the Mac, select "Print" from the "File" menu, then click the "Save as PDF" button. The PDF will look more or less exactly like how the ...
Most had a keyboard integrated into the same case as the motherboard, or, more frequently, a mainboard. While the expandable home computers appeared from the very start (the Apple II offered as many as seven expansion slots) as the whole segment was generally aimed downmarket , few offers were priced or positioned high enough to allow for such ...