Some examples include mineral dust, ammonium sulfate, pollen, carbon or soot emissions, and so on. � Watch more video tutorials. The dots themselves do not encode text; they are just recognized by the camera inside the pen which transfers the info to the mini computer (downloaded software within the LeapFrog Tag pen, or the cartridge of VTech Bugsby pen) where the pen is located at the certain moment. Turing termed Ada’s comment, the “Lovelace Objection” as it is known in computing circles today.
1 comment:
Some examples include mineral dust, ammonium sulfate, pollen, carbon or soot emissions, and so on. � Watch more video tutorials. The dots themselves do not encode text; they are just recognized by the camera inside the pen which transfers the info to the mini computer (downloaded software within the LeapFrog Tag pen, or the cartridge of VTech Bugsby pen) where the pen is located at the certain moment. Turing termed Ada’s comment, the “Lovelace Objection” as it is known in computing circles today.
Post a Comment