Hardware And Software Facts

October 14, 2011

Computer Hardware

Hardware And Software Facts

Hardware examples are from the keyboard, mouse, monitor, printer, scanner, speaker to the components that consists your system unit. Hardware actually means hard and visible. On the other hand, software which you visible see but virtually, like your Operating System (Windows XP, Vista, 7….. LinuxOS, MacOS, etc.), Word processor, spreadsheets, etc.

The hardware components and software are essential to your computer, the two are interdependent to each other, and it means that if one area will be defective then both will not function properly. That is, the hardware and your processor don’t each other, so software will be mediate between so that the processor can give understandable command where the hardware follow, so hardware will be useless if there is no software that can communicate to it. Likewise software will depend on hardware availability and functionality, that is software will be use if there is no hardware that it should communicate, and after all software will not be around without the hardware. This is a kind of egg and chicken who did come first thing.

Regardless of any argument, both are created to make the life of the user easier and convenient, and we can rest assure that there will be an evolution that will innovate existing software and hardware such as voice operated computer which currently we see from other gadgets and stuffs around the globe. Who knows? Maybe tomorrow, just watch the news….

Protecting both hardware and software are very advisable, obviously. In the hardware part, you should know troubleshooting techniques to locate the problem of your computer hardware by the use of either software or other methods. While in the software part, you should be watching about viruses, malware, or even incorrect installation.

Of course, you can always the net by reading some articles pertaining to different pros and cons of both hardware and software.

www.ericpapasit.info


Cassette to CD and MP3

Computer Hardware – click on the image below for more information.

  • For Windows XP, Vista or 7 including 64 bit
  • Copy cassette tapes and vinyl records to digital formats
  • Includes cables and works with any tape player or turntable
  • Powerful software with noise filtering, CD burning, and much more (see pictures)
  • Save to audio CDs, iTunes, Windows Media Player, MP3 and more

Computer Hardware

Copy your favourite tapes and records to CD and MP3 the easy way. Includes all the cables needed to plug your tape / record player to your PC and easy step-by-step software.
Works with all types of tapes and records from commercial albums to homemade recordings and audio books.
Remove hiss, pops and clicks with a single click and apply RIAA equalisation effects. Record 45 or 78 rpm records on a 33 rpm turntable with the speed change effect.
Add artist, album, year, genre and cover art to the tra


Cassette to CD and MP3

Click on the button for more Computer Hardware information and reviews.

Computer Hardware in Plain English

Computer Programs and Systems, Inc. to Broadcast Its Third Quarter 2011
Computer Hardware
Founded in 1979, the Company is a single-source vendor providing comprehensive software and hardware products, complemented by complete installation services and extensive support. Its fully integrated, enterprise-wide system automates clinical and

Computer Hardware question by shek: My brother wants to study computer hardware engineering what course should he apply to?
He wants to study computer hardware engineering. He just cleared his high school so what course should he take.

Computer Hardware best answer:

Answer by Moto R
i am sorry but i font have the answer but i my self want to become one please tell me what prerequisites are required and which college or university he is going to my email address is motorider@rocketmail.com or if its ok with you and him just give me his email address and ill ask him.

3 Comments for this entry

  • Low-Ranking Reviewer "tell it like it is" says:
    66 of 67 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    it actually works, May 11, 2011
    Amazon Verified Purchase(http://www.amazon.com/gp/community-help/amazon-verified-purchase', ‘AmazonHelp’, ‘width=400,height=500,resizable=1,scrollbars=1,toolbar=0,status=1′);return false; “>What’s this?)
    This review is from: Cassette to CD and MP3 (CD-ROM)

    surprisingly works straight out of the box. the dvd-like case comes with a 3.5mm to 6.35mm adapter, a 3.5mm stereo minijack cable, a stereo phono to 3.5mm minijack, and a software disc. So 3 of the 4 included items you could probably buy on your own. the instruction booklet is minimal, but it’s easy enough to understand what to do. the software disc loads in a matter of minutes.

    the only thing you would need to provide is a tape/record player that has a headphone socket or audio out/inputs to use with the included cords, and a pc with a microphone socket. oh, and the cassettes and records you want to record of course. you hook these items up and you’re ready to go. it even has a usb cable option, but i haven’t tried that. i dont have a record player so i cant say how well that works either.

    i bought this mainly to convert certain songs on my old tapes that i haven’t been able to find on mp3 yet and for the most part it works. mp3 quality depends on devices used, quality of tape sound, and volume level you set it at(too high or low and it will tell you on-screen). actual recordings are silent, but the on-screen instructions say there is a way to hear the sound while you’re recording but i haven’t figured that out yet. otherwise it’s just trial and error regarding the volume you set with the visual equalizer on hand(make sure it’s moving but not too much or crazy-like). the software gives you numerous options like noise reduction, separating tracks, naming them, pausing at certain times during recordings, setting recording lengths, etc.

    honestly though, i haven’t used some of those options let alone perfected them for great recordings…yet. im pleased it works out of the box, but you will have to put some time & effort to make your mp3s sound great. at least the options are there and experimenting can be fun. btw, it allows you to make your mp3s and add them to windows media player, itunes, or a cd. i chose to go with windows, too much trial and error experimenting straight to cds. so far i have made a couple of cd compilations with these mp3s so i’m glad i bought it. definitely recommended.
    ____________________________________________

    update(6/14/11), i’m not going to change anything in my original review, just wanted to add a few things since:

    * i see it’s at $30 now, i think most of us bought it at $25.
    * i’ve made WELL OVER 25 mp3s and quite a few cds with this so its paid for itself already(assuming i could even find the non-available songs i recorded on amazon as a $1 or less mp3 to begin with).
    * once the cd is installed you should use it without the disk in the drive. i tried to open the program once by putting the disk in the drive after it was already installed, and i tried to use it once with the cd in the drive and got an error warning each time. both times i had to reboot my pc and uninstall/re-install it(i didn’t say i was bright).
    * i was kinda wrong…when you’re recording, make sure the visual equalizer MOVES ALOT(but not all-over-the-place-crazy). if you get a warning thats it’s too loud, ignore it and let it continue recording. most of the time it will turn out ok and you should get a decent to good recording. but if it repeatedly warns you that it’s too loud and mentions “clipping”, start over.
    * while recording, don’t touch the cord/cable. it might affect it.
    * during the editing phase(noise reduction/seperate track/etc) of the mp3, mess with it all you want. there is a “restart audio” option(basically the do-over or undo-edits button) if you dont like your changes.
    * buy/invest/borrow a tape player with digital volume control, it takes the guess work out of remembering what volume to have it at while recording.
    * i do have to re-emphasize the trial & error, for the most part it works, quality depends on devices used, and time and effort aspects of my original review plus throw in the obvious “your mileage/results may vary”. ex: recording many store-bought tapes and various blank tapes(high CrO2, normal bias) with recorded music on them, results ranged from “it could pass for a store-bought cd or mp3 off amazon” to “crap”.
    * speaking of results, you might be surprised how good they turn out on cd. ex: i recorded a blank tape with recorded music, it warned it was too loud during recording, i converted it to mp3 anyway, from windows media player it sounded decent, used on my cell phone’s speakers it was too low but with headphones it was decent, burned to a blank cd and it sounded really good with good bass. very surprised. so don’t give up on a recording.
    * finally, if you have it set to automatically stop after a pre-set recording length, it always seems to record about 15-30 seconds more than what you intended(i’ve had it happen manually too). ex: i knew a song i was recording was 4 mins and set it for 4 but it shows…

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  • Derek Hammers says:
    19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
    1.0 out of 5 stars
    Horrible Sound Quality-Don’t Buy, June 9, 2011
    By 
    Amazon Verified Purchase(http://www.amazon.com/gp/community-help/amazon-verified-purchase', ‘AmazonHelp’, ‘width=400,height=500,resizable=1,scrollbars=1,toolbar=0,status=1′);return false; “>What’s this?)
    This review is from: Cassette to CD and MP3 (CD-ROM)

    I bought this based on the other reviews and had high hopes that I would be able to “save” my favorite music cassettes to my computer without having to buy the particular CD or that I would be able to even find the CD album version. I even bought a higher-end cassette player to do the conversion. I tried two different cassettes and they both had the same problem, horrible quality sound such as fluctuations in volume and sounding like it was playing from inside a barrel. What a waste. I am back to zero.

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  • Penny says:
    22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Cassette to CD and MP3, April 22, 2011
    By 
    Penny
    Amazon Verified Purchase(http://www.amazon.com/gp/community-help/amazon-verified-purchase', ‘AmazonHelp’, ‘width=400,height=500,resizable=1,scrollbars=1,toolbar=0,status=1′);return false; “>What’s this?)
    This review is from: Cassette to CD and MP3 (CD-ROM)

    I think this is great. Installed easily, easy to work. I can now listen to my cassettes and records on my mp3. Haven’t tried the records yet but I’m sure it will work just as easy. Takes some time since it has to play through to record it but thats ok.

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