Wikipedia - 100 Gigabit Ethernet -- Technologies for computer networking
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Wikipedia - 1260 (computer virus)
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Wikipedia - 128-bit computing -- Computer architecture
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Wikipedia - 24-bit computing -- Computer architecture bit width
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Wikipedia - 2D computer graphics
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Wikipedia - 2-in-1 PC -- tablet-laptop features computer
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Wikipedia - 2-satisfiability -- Theoretical computer science problem
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Wikipedia - 32-bit computing -- Computer architecture
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Wikipedia - 3D computer graphics software
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Wikipedia - 3D computer graphics -- Graphics that use a three-dimensional representation of geometric data
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Wikipedia - 3D XPoint -- Novel computer memory type meant to offer higher speeds than flash memory and lower prices than DRAM
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Wikipedia - 3M computer
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Wikipedia - 48-bit computing -- discrete values integer in computer architecture
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Wikipedia - 68K/OS -- Operating system for the Sinclair QL microcomputer
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Wikipedia - 80 Micro -- Computer magazine published between 1980 and 1988
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Wikipedia - 8-bit clean -- A computer system that correctly handles 8-bit character encodings.
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Wikipedia - AAAI Squirrel AI Award -- American annual computer science prize
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Wikipedia - Aakash (tablet series) -- Tablet computers
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Wikipedia - A-A-P -- Computer program
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Wikipedia - Aaron Halfaker -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Abominable (2019 film) -- 2019 computer-animated adventure film directed by Jill Culton and Todd Wilderman
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Wikipedia - Abstraction (computer science) -- Technique for arranging complexity of computer systems
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Wikipedia - A Bug's Life -- 1998 American computer-animated comedy adventure film produced by Pixar
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Wikipedia - ACE (computer)
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Wikipedia - Acer Aspire desktops -- Series of desktop computers
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Wikipedia - ACID (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Acorn Computers
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Wikipedia - Adaptive histogram equalization -- Computer image processing technique
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Wikipedia - Adobe Inc. -- American multinational computer software company
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Wikipedia - Adriaan de Groot (software developer) -- Dutch computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Adrian V. Stokes -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Adrozek (malware) -- computer malware
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Wikipedia - Advanced Computerized Execution System -- NASDAQ subscription service
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Wikipedia - Advanced Computer Techniques
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Wikipedia - Advanced persistent threat -- Set of stealthy and continuous computer hacking processes
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Wikipedia - Advice (computer science)
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Wikipedia - AIDA interactive educational freeware diabetes simulator -- medical simulation computer program
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Wikipedia - AIDS (computer virus)
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Wikipedia - Air data computer
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Wikipedia - A. J. Bernheim Brush -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Alan Turing -- English mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Alan W. Paeth -- Canadian computer scientist and bestselling author
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Wikipedia - Albert Hopkins (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Alex Graves (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Algebraic semantics (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Alice (computer chip)
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Wikipedia - Alice K. Hartley -- American computer scientist (1937-2017)
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Wikipedia - ALOHAnet -- Computer networking system
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Wikipedia - Alphabet (computer science)
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Wikipedia - AMD K6 -- Computer microprocessor
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Wikipedia - Amelia Greenhall -- American feminist, technology industry blogger, activist, former computer UX/UI designer
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Wikipedia - American Challenge: A Sailing Simulation -- 1986 computer game
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Wikipedia - Amiga 4000 -- Commodore computer
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Wikipedia - Amiga Format -- Former British computer magazine
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Wikipedia - Amiga -- Family of personal computers sold by Commodore
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Wikipedia - Amit Kumar (academic) -- Indian computer scientist and academic
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Wikipedia - Amstrad CPC 464 -- 1984 home computer
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Wikipedia - Amstrad CPC -- Home computers produced by Amstrad
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Wikipedia - Analog computers
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Wikipedia - Analog computer -- Computer that uses analog techonology
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Wikipedia - Analogue computer
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Wikipedia - Andrew J. Hanson -- American theoretical physicist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Angband (video game) -- Dungeon-crawling roguelike computer game
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Wikipedia - Angela Orebaugh -- American computer scientist and author
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Wikipedia - Anil K. Jain (computer scientist, born 1948)
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Wikipedia - Anisotropic filtering -- Method of enhancing the image quality of textures on surfaces of computer graphics
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Wikipedia - Anita Borg -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Anita K. Jones -- American computer scientist and former U.S. government official
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Wikipedia - Annual BCI Research Award -- Annual award for brain-computer interface research
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Wikipedia - ANSI art -- Computer art form using text characters
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Wikipedia - Ansible (software) -- Open-source software platform for remote configuring and managing computers
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Wikipedia - Anthony TS Ho -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Anti-computer tactics
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Wikipedia - Anti-unification (computer science)
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Wikipedia - AP Computer Science Principles -- AP high school course in procedural programming and computer science concepts
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Wikipedia - AP Computer Science -- Concept in Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Aperture (computer memory)
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Wikipedia - Apocalyptica (video game) -- Third-person shooter computer game
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Wikipedia - Apollo Computer -- Manufacturer of Apollo/Domain workstations in the 1980s
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Wikipedia - Apollo Guidance Computer -- Guidance and navigation computer used in Apollo spacecraft
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Wikipedia - Apple Advanced Typography -- Computer technology by Apple
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Wikipedia - Apple Computer, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp.
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Wikipedia - Apple Computer
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Wikipedia - Apple computer
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Wikipedia - Apple Corps v Apple Computer
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Wikipedia - Apple Corps v. Apple Computer
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Wikipedia - Apple Filing Protocol -- Computer network protocol
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Wikipedia - Apple IIc -- Fourth model in the Apple II series of computers
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Wikipedia - Apple IIe -- Third model in the Apple II series of personal computers
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Wikipedia - Apple IIGS -- Apple II series 16-bit computer
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Wikipedia - Apple II Plus -- Second model of the Apple II series of personal computers by Apple Computer
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Wikipedia - Apple II -- First computer model in the Apple II series
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Wikipedia - Apple I -- Computer built by the Apple
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Wikipedia - Apple Lisa -- Personal computer by Apple Inc.
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Wikipedia - Apple-Oids -- Video game clone of Asteroids made for the Apple II computer in 1980
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Wikipedia - Apple ProDOS -- Operating system on Apple II series computers
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Wikipedia - AppleTalk -- Computer network protocol suite
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Wikipedia - Application lifecycle management -- Product management of computer programs throughout their development lifecycles
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Wikipedia - Applications of computer vision
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Wikipedia - A Quiet Weekend in Capri -- Computer adventure game
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Wikipedia - ArcaOS -- Computer operating system based on IBM's OS/2 Warp
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Wikipedia - ArchiCAD -- Computer-aided design software for architecture
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Wikipedia - Architectural pattern (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Ardent Computer Corporation
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Wikipedia - Ardent Computer
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Wikipedia - Arden: The World of Shakespeare -- 21st-century partially complete educational computer game
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Wikipedia - Areal density (computer storage)
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Wikipedia - Argument (computer science)
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Wikipedia - A. Richard Newton -- Australian-born American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Arithmetic shift -- Shift operator in computer programming
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Wikipedia - Armin B. Cremers -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - ARRA (computer)
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Wikipedia - Arrow (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Arthur Norman (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Arthur ter Hofstede -- Dutch computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Artificial Linguistic Internet Computer Entity
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Wikipedia - Ashawna Hailey -- American computer scientist and philanthropist
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Wikipedia - Aspect (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Aspect (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Assembler (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Assertion (software development) -- In computer programming, statement that a predicate is always true at that point in code execution
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Wikipedia - Asset (computer security) -- Data, device, or other component of a computing environment
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Wikipedia - Assignment (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Asus Transformer Pad TF701T -- Tablet computer released in 2013
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Wikipedia - Asus -- Taiwanese computer and electronics company
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Wikipedia - Asynchronous System Trap -- Mechanism used in several computer operating systems
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Wikipedia - Atanasoff-Berry computer -- Early electronic digital computing device
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Wikipedia - Atari Falcon -- Personal computer
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Wikipedia - Atari, Inc. -- Defunct American video game and home computer company
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Wikipedia - Atari joystick port -- Computer port used for gaming controllers
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Wikipedia - Atari ST -- Line of home computers from Atari Corporation
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Wikipedia - Atari TOS -- Operating system of the Atari ST range of computers
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Wikipedia - At Ease -- Alternative to the Macintosh desktop developed by Apple Computer in the early 1990s for the classic Mac OS
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Wikipedia - ATF (video game) -- 1988 computer game
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Wikipedia - ATHENA computer
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Wikipedia - Atlas Autocode -- 1960s computer programming language
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Wikipedia - Atlas Computer (Manchester)
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Wikipedia - Atlas Computer
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Wikipedia - Atlas (computer) -- Supercomputer of the 1960s
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Wikipedia - Atomic (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Aude Oliva -- French computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Audio file format -- File format for storing digital audio data on a computer system
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Wikipedia - Audio Stream Input/Output -- Computer sound card driver protocol
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Wikipedia - Audrey Bates (programmer) -- British-American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Audrey Girouard -- Canadian human computer interaction researcher
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Wikipedia - Augmented reality -- View of the real world with computer-generated supplementary features
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Wikipedia - Augusto Sampaio (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Augusto Sampaio -- Brazilian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Aurora (supercomputer) -- Planned supercomputer
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Wikipedia - Australian Computer Society
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Wikipedia - Authentication -- The act of proving an assertion, often the identity of a computer system user
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Wikipedia - AutoCAD -- Commercial computer-aided design (CAD) and drafting software application
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Wikipedia - Autodesk Maya -- 3D computer graphics software
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Wikipedia - Automated optical inspection -- System for visual inspection of printed circuit boards by a computerized system
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Wikipedia - Automatic switched-transport network -- Computer network protocol
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Wikipedia - A/UX -- Early Unix-based operating system from Apple Computer
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Wikipedia - Avast Antivirus -- Antivirus computer program
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Wikipedia - Aviation Industry Computer-Based Training Committee
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Wikipedia - Axiom (computer algebra system)
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Wikipedia - Back Orifice 2000 -- Computer program for remote administration
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Wikipedia - Back Orifice -- Computer program for remote system administration
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Wikipedia - Back-side bus -- Computer bus used on early Intel platforms to connect the CPU to CPU cache memory, usually off-die L2
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Wikipedia - Backus-Naur form -- One of the two main notation techniques for context-free grammars in computer science
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Wikipedia - Bagle (computer worm)
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Wikipedia - Bag-of-words model in computer vision -- Image classification model
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Wikipedia - Ball-and-disk integrator -- Component used in mechanical computers
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Wikipedia - Ballistics (video game) -- 2001 futuristic racing computer video game
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Wikipedia - Barbara Boucher Owens -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Barrier (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Barry H.V. Topping -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Barry Leiba -- American computer scientist and software researcher
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Wikipedia - Baseball (computer game)
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Wikipedia - BASIC Computer Games
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Wikipedia - BCPL -- Multi-paradigm computer programming language
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Wikipedia - Beach Chair (film test) -- 1986 short computer animation by Eben Fiske Ostby
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Wikipedia - Beatrice Worsley -- First female computer scientist in Canada
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Wikipedia - Bee Card -- ROM cartridge medium for MSX computer software
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Wikipedia - Behat (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Behavioral modeling in computer-aided design -- High-level circuit modeling technique where behavior of logic is modeled
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Wikipedia - Belady's anomaly -- Computer storage phenomenon
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Wikipedia - Bell's law of computer classes
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Wikipedia - Bernt Schiele -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - BESK -- Sweden's first electronic computer
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Wikipedia - BESM -- Series of Soviet mainframe computers built in 1950-60s
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Wikipedia - Bettina Speckmann -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Betty Holberton -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Beyond Dark Castle -- 1987 computer game
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Wikipedia - Bezier curve -- Curve used in computer graphics and related fields
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Wikipedia - Bfloat16 floating-point format -- Floating-point number format used in computer processors
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Wikipedia - Biblical software -- Computer applications to read or study biblical texts
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Wikipedia - Big Hero 6 (film) -- 2014 American 3D computer-animated superhero-comedy film
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Wikipedia - Bill Atkinson -- American computer engineer and photographer
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Wikipedia - Bill Buxton -- Canadian computer scientist and designer
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Wikipedia - Billiard-Ball Computer
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Wikipedia - Bill Joy -- American computer scientist and co-founder of Sun Microsystems
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Wikipedia - Bill Paxton (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Bingo (1998 film) -- 1998 computer-animated short film directed by Chris Landreth
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Wikipedia - Biocomputer
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Wikipedia - Birgit Vogel-Heuser -- German computer scientist and professor
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Wikipedia - Bit field -- Data structure used in computer programming
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Wikipedia - BitKeeper -- Proprietary software tool for distributed revision control of computer source code
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Wikipedia - Bits and Bytes -- Canadian educational TV series about computers
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Wikipedia - Bitwise operation -- Computer operation that operates on values at the level of their individual bits
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Wikipedia - Bjarne Stroustrup -- Danish computer scientist, creator of C++
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Wikipedia - B.K. Syngal -- American computer engineer
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Wikipedia - BlackBerry PlayBook -- Tablet computer
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Wikipedia - BlackNurse (Computer Security)
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Wikipedia - Blaster (computer worm)
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Wikipedia - BleachBit -- Free disk space cleaner, privacy manager, and computer system optimizer
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Wikipedia - Bleeping Computer -- Technology news and computer help website
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Wikipedia - Blender (software) -- 3D computer graphics software
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Wikipedia - Blit (computer terminal)
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Wikipedia - Blitzkrieg 3 -- 2017 Online RTS computer game
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Wikipedia - Blue screen of death -- Error screen displayed after a fatal system error on a Windows computer
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Wikipedia - Blue Sky Studios -- American computer animation film studio
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Wikipedia - Blue Waters -- Supercomputer at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States
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Wikipedia - Board representation (computer chess)
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Wikipedia - Bobby Hersom -- British mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Bob Scheifler -- American computer scientist.
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Wikipedia - Bolo Computer Museum
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Wikipedia - Bonjour (software) -- Computer networking technology
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Wikipedia - Bonk's Adventure -- 1989 computer and video game
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Wikipedia - Bonnie Berger -- American mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Book:Computer science
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Wikipedia - Boot disk -- Removable disk from which a computer can boot an operating system
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Wikipedia - Boxing (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Brad Karp -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Brain-computer interface
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Wikipedia - Brain (computer virus)
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Wikipedia - Branch (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Brantley Coile -- American businessman and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Brave (2012 film) -- 2012 American computer-animated fantasy film
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Wikipedia - Break key -- Key of a computer keyboard
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Wikipedia - Brenda Baker -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Brendan Eich -- American computer programmer and technologist
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Wikipedia - Brendan Q. Ferguson -- American computer game designer, writer, programmer
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Wikipedia - Brent Hailpern -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Bret Taylor -- American computer programmer and entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Brewster Kahle -- American computer engineer, founder of the Internet Archive
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Wikipedia - Brian Acton -- American computer programmer and Internet entrepreneur, co-founder of WhatsApp
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Wikipedia - Brian Behlendorf -- American computer programmer and executive
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Wikipedia - Brian d foy -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Brian Fox (computer programmer) -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Brianna Wu -- American video game developer and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Brian Oakley -- Civil servant, chief executive, computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Brian Randell -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Brigitte Jaumard -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - British Computer Society
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Wikipedia - British computer
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Wikipedia - BRLESC -- Ballistic Research Laboratories Electronic Scientific Computer
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Wikipedia - Broadcast, unknown-unicast and multicast traffic -- Computer networking concept
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Wikipedia - Bruce Ableson -- Computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Bruce Bastian -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Bruce Eckel -- American computer programmer, author and consultant
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Wikipedia - Bruno Courcelle -- French mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Brutus cluster -- Computer network at the ETH Zurich university in Switzerland
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Wikipedia - Bryan Cantrill -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Bubble memory -- Obsolete type of non-volatile computer memory
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Wikipedia - Buff (computer gaming)
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Wikipedia - Buffer overflow -- Anomaly in computer security and programming
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Wikipedia - Burroughs large systems -- Range of mainframe computers in the 1960s and 70s
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Wikipedia - Bus (computing) -- System that transfers data between components within a computer
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Wikipedia - Business entity (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Business Process Execution Language -- Computer executable language
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Wikipedia - Butt-Ugly Martians -- English language computer-animated television series
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Wikipedia - Byte (magazine) -- Defunct American microcomputer magazine
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Wikipedia - Byte Sieve -- Computer-based implementation of the Sieve of Eratosthenes
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Wikipedia - Byzantine fault -- Fault in a computer system that presents different symptoms to different observers
|
Wikipedia - C++23 -- Computer programming language
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Wikipedia - C4 Engine -- Proprietary computer game engine developed by Terathon Software
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Wikipedia - Cache prefetching -- Computer processing technique to boost memory performance
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Wikipedia - Cadabra (computer program)
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Wikipedia - CAD/CAM -- Computer-aided design/Computer-aided manufacturing
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Wikipedia - Calcomp plotter -- Computer graphics output device
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Wikipedia - Callback (computer programming)
|
Wikipedia - Callback (computer science)
|
Wikipedia - Call stack -- Stack data structure that stores information about the active subroutines of a computer program
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Wikipedia - Cal Newport -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Canon X-07 -- Early personal computer made by Canon
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Wikipedia - Capability-based security -- Computer safety concept
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Wikipedia - CAP computer
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Wikipedia - Caps Lock -- Computer key
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Wikipedia - CAPTCHA -- Computer test to discriminate human users from spambots
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Wikipedia - Cargo cult programming -- Ritual inclusion of computer code that serve no purpose
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Wikipedia - Carla Brodley -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Carla Ellis -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Carla Gomes -- Portuguese-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Carl Chang (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Carl Hewitt -- American computer scientist and designer of Planner programming language
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Wikipedia - Carme Torras -- Spanish mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Carola Wenk -- German-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Carole Goble -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Carolina Cruz-Neira -- American computer scientist and educator
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Wikipedia - Carroll Morgan (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Cars 2 -- 2011 American computer-animated action comedy spy film produced by Pixar Animation Studios
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Wikipedia - Cars Toons -- American series of computer animated short films, started 2008
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Wikipedia - Caryn Navy -- American mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Cascade (computer virus)
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Wikipedia - CAS latency -- Time delay between data read command and availability of data in a computer's RAM
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Wikipedia - Caterina Scoglio -- Italian network scientist and computer engineer
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Wikipedia - Catherine G. Wolf -- American psychologist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Catherine Pelachaud -- French computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Catherine Plaisant -- French American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - C (computer language)
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Wikipedia - CCSO Nameserver -- Computer network protocol
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Wikipedia - CDC Cyber -- Range of mainframe-class supercomputers manufectured by Control Data Corporation (CDC) during the 1970s and 1980s
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Wikipedia - C. Dianne Martin -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - CD-ROM -- Pre-pressed compact disc containing computer data
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Wikipedia - CeBIT -- Computer expo
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Wikipedia - Cecilia Berdichevsky -- Argentinian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Cecilia Mascolo -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Cecilia R. Aragon -- American computer scientist, author, and aerobatic pilot
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Wikipedia - Cellular automaton -- A discrete model studied in computer science
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Wikipedia - Cel shading -- Computer graphics rendering technique used to mimic the look of 2D animation
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Wikipedia - Center for Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Central Computer and Telecommunications Agency -- Defunct UK government agency based in Norwich, England
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Wikipedia - Central Philippine University - College of Computer Studies -- Computer school at Central Philippine University
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Wikipedia - Central processing unit -- Central component of any computer system which executes input/output, arithmetical, and logical operations
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Wikipedia - Cerebra Computers -- Indian computer hardware company
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Wikipedia - Chad (computer)
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Wikipedia - Chai Keong Toh -- Singaporean computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Chandrajit Bajaj -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Chan-Jin Chung -- Computer science professor (born 1959)
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Wikipedia - Channel system (computer science) -- Finite-state machine with fifo buffers for memory
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Wikipedia - Chaos Computer Club
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Wikipedia - Character (computer)
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Wikipedia - Charles Bachman -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Charles Edge (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist and author
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Wikipedia - Charles H. Bennett (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Charles Ingram -- English novelist, computer repairman, army major, and fraudster
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Wikipedia - Charles Katz -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Charles Petzold -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Charlie Lee (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Charlotte Davis Mooers -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Charlotte Froese Fischer -- Canadian-American applied mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Charming (film) -- 2019 computer-animated musical comedy film
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Wikipedia - Ch (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Checkerboard rendering -- 3D computer graphics rendering technique
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Wikipedia - Cheekah Bow Bow (That Computer Song) -- 2000 single by Vengaboys
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Wikipedia - Chemical computer
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Wikipedia - Cherry (company) -- German computer peripheral company
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Wikipedia - Chess computer
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Wikipedia - ChessV -- Computer program designed to play chess variants
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Wikipedia - Chia Shen -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Chieko Asakawa -- Japanese computer scientist
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Wikipedia - CHIP (computer)
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Wikipedia - Choplifter -- Video game first made in 1982 for the Apple II computer
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Wikipedia - Chorded keyboard -- Computer input device
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Wikipedia - Chris Danforth -- American computer scientist and professor
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Wikipedia - Chris Gladwin (engineer) -- American inventor, computer engineer
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Wikipedia - Chris Kubecka -- American computer programmer and computer security researcher
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Wikipedia - Chris Lilley (computer scientist) -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Chris Piche -- Canadian computer scientist and entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Chris Pile (programmer) -- British computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Chris Roberts (video game developer) -- Computer game designer, game programmer, film producer and film director
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Wikipedia - Christel Baier -- German theoretical computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Christian Borgs -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Christiane Floyd -- Austrian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Christine P. Hendon -- Electrical Engineer and Computer Scientist
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Wikipedia - Christine Piatko -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Christmas Tree EXEC -- First widely disruptive computer worm
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Wikipedia - Christofari -- Supercomputer
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Wikipedia - Christopher Blizzard -- American computer engineer
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Wikipedia - Christopher Boyd (IT security) -- Computer Security researcher
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Wikipedia - Christopher Dunn (computer programmer) -- British writer and computer enthusiast
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Wikipedia - Christopher Evans (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Christopher Langton -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Christopher P. Gane -- British-American computer scientist (1938-)
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Wikipedia - Christopher Strachey -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Chris Wallace (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Chromatic (programmer) -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Chromebook -- Laptop or tablet computer running Chrome OS
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Wikipedia - Chuck Easttom -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Chung Laung Liu -- Taiwanese computer scientist
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Wikipedia - CID-201 -- Digital computer from Cuba
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Wikipedia - Cindy Grimm -- American computer scientist, roboticist, and mechanical engineer
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Wikipedia - Circuit (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Claire Mathieu -- French computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Clan (computer gaming)
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Wikipedia - Clara.io -- 3D computer graphics software
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Wikipedia - Clarence Ellis (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Class (computer programming) -- In object-oriented programming, a definition that specifies how an object works
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Wikipedia - Class (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Classes (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Classes of computers
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Wikipedia - Claudia Linnhoff-Popien -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Claudico -- Artificial intelligence poker playing computer program
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Wikipedia - Claudio Silva (computer scientist) -- Computer scientist and data scientist
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Wikipedia - ClearCube -- Computer systems maufacturer in Austin, Texas, U.S.A.
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Wikipedia - Client (computing) -- Piece of computer hardware or software accessing a server service
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Wikipedia - Cliff Jones (computer scientist) -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Cliff Shaw -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Clint Curtis -- American lawyer and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Clipping (computer graphics) -- Computer graphics term
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Wikipedia - C-list (computer security)
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Wikipedia - CLIWOC -- A research project to convert ships' logbook weather data into a computerised database
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Wikipedia - Clone (computer and video games)
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Wikipedia - Closure (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Closure (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Cloud computing -- Form of Internet-based computing that provides shared computer processing resources and data to computers and other devices on demand
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Wikipedia - Cloud storage -- Model of computer data storage
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Wikipedia - Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2 -- 2013 American computer-animated science fiction comedy film
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Wikipedia - Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs (film) -- 2009 American computer-animated science fiction comedy film
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Wikipedia - Coco (2017 film) -- 2017 computer-animated film produced by Pixar Animation Studios
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Wikipedia - Codata (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Code Red II -- Computer worm
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Wikipedia - Code refactoring -- Restructuring existing computer code without changing its external behavior
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Wikipedia - Codewars -- Computer programming community and challenge site
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Wikipedia - Cohesion (computer science)
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Wikipedia - ColcaSac -- American manufacturer of computer accessories
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Wikipedia - Cold boot attack -- a means of compromising computer security by restarting the computer
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Wikipedia - Coleco Adam -- Home computer by Coleco, released in 1983
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Wikipedia - Colette Bangert -- American computer and visual artist
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Wikipedia - Colette Rolland -- French computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Collection (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Collection of Computer Science Bibliographies
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Wikipedia - College of Technology and Computer Science at East Carolina University
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Wikipedia - Collision (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Collision detection -- Term in computer science
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Wikipedia - Colobot -- Computer game
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Wikipedia - Colossal Typewriter -- Computer program
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Wikipedia - Colossus computer -- Early British cryptanalysis computer
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Wikipedia - Colour banding -- Inaccuracy in computer graphics
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Wikipedia - COMDEX -- Former computer expo
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Wikipedia - Command (computing) -- Directive to a computer program
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Wikipedia - Command key -- Computer key
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Wikipedia - Command-line interface -- Type of computer interface based on entering text commands and viewing text output
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Wikipedia - Comment (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Commodity computer
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Wikipedia - Commodore 16 -- Home computer
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Wikipedia - Commodore 65 -- Prototype computer
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Wikipedia - Commodore bus -- A serial bus of the home computers series of Commodore
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Wikipedia - Commodore International -- American home computer and electronics manufacturer
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Wikipedia - Commodore VIC-20 -- Home computer
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Wikipedia - Common Admission Test -- Computer based test held in India
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Wikipedia - Communications, Computers, and Networks (Scientific American)
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Wikipedia - Communications, Computers, and Networks -- Special issue of Scientififc American magazine
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Wikipedia - Community Memory -- Public computerized bulletin board system
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Wikipedia - Compaq Portable III -- 1987 computer
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Wikipedia - Compaq SLT -- Line of computers made by Compaq in the 1980s
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Wikipedia - Compaq -- American manufacturer of computers
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Wikipedia - Comparison of 3D computer graphics software
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Wikipedia - Comparison of CalDAV and CardDAV implementations -- Comparison of computer protocols
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Wikipedia - Comparison of computer-aided design editors
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Wikipedia - Comparison of computer-aided design software
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Wikipedia - Comparison of computer shells
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Wikipedia - Comparison of computer viruses
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Wikipedia - Comparison of note-taking software -- Comparison of computer software designed for taking notes
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Wikipedia - Compiler -- Computer program which translates code from one programming language to another
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Wikipedia - Complex Instruction Set Computer
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Wikipedia - Complex instruction set computer -- a processor executing one instruction in multiple clock cycles
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Wikipedia - Computability theory (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Computability theory -- Branch of mathematical logic, computer science, and the theory of computation studying computable functions and Turing degrees
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Wikipedia - Computational geometry -- Branch of computer science
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Wikipedia - Computational musicology -- Interdisciplinary research area between musicology and computer science
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Wikipedia - Computational resource -- Something a computer needs needed to solve a problem, such as processing steps or memory
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Wikipedia - Computational science -- Field that uses computers and mathematical models to analyze and solve scientific problems
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Wikipedia - Computec -- German computer media company
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Wikipedia - Compute Node Linux -- Runtime environment based on the Linux kernel for several Cray supercomputer systems based on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
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Wikipedia - Computer 2000 -- Computer
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Wikipedia - Computer access control
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Wikipedia - Computer accessibility -- Ability of a computer system to be used by all people
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Wikipedia - Computer adaptive testing
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Wikipedia - Computer addiction -- Excessive or compulsive use of the computer
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Wikipedia - Computer: A History of the Information Machine
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Wikipedia - Computer aided assessment
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Wikipedia - Computer Aided Design
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Wikipedia - Computer-Aided Design
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Wikipedia - Computer aided design
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided design -- Constructing a product by means of computer
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided diagnosis
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided dispatch
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided engineering
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided garden design
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided geometric design
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided industrial design
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Wikipedia - Computer aided manufacturing
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided manufacturing
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided proof
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Wikipedia - Computer-Aided Software Engineering
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided software engineering
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Wikipedia - Computer-aided technologies
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Wikipedia - Computer Algebra System
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Wikipedia - Computer algebra system
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Wikipedia - Computer algebra -- Scientific area at the interface between computer science and mathematics
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Wikipedia - Computer algorithms
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Wikipedia - Computer algorithm
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Wikipedia - Computer and information science
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Wikipedia - Computer and network surveillance
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Wikipedia - Computer and video game genres
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Wikipedia - ComputerAndVideoGames.com
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Wikipedia - Computer and Video Games
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Wikipedia - Computer Animation and Social Agents
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Wikipedia - Computer Animation Production System
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Wikipedia - Computer animation -- Art of creating moving images using computers
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Wikipedia - Computer appliance -- Computer with software or firmware that is specifically designed to provide a specific computing resource
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Wikipedia - Computer application
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Wikipedia - Computer architecture simulator
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Wikipedia - Computer Architecture
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Wikipedia - Computer architecture -- Set of rules and methods that describe the functionality, organization, and implementation of computer systems
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Wikipedia - Computer Arimaa
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Wikipedia - Computer Arts Society
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Wikipedia - Computer art -- Art genre
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Wikipedia - Computer assisted composition
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Wikipedia - Computer-assisted gaming
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Wikipedia - Computer assisted learning
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Wikipedia - Computer-assisted proof
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Wikipedia - Computer-assisted reviewing
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Wikipedia - Computer-assisted telephone interviewing -- Telephone surveying technique that includes assistance by a software application
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Wikipedia - Computer-assisted translation
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Wikipedia - Computer Associates
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Wikipedia - Computer Audition
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Wikipedia - Computer-automated design
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Wikipedia - Computer Automation
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Wikipedia - Computer Baba -- Indian ascetic and environmentalist
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Wikipedia - Computer Bismarck
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Wikipedia - Computer bridge -- Playing of contract bridge with computer software
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Wikipedia - Computer bug
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Wikipedia - Computer bus
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Wikipedia - Computer capacity measurements
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Wikipedia - Computer case -- Enclosure that contains most of the components of a computer
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Wikipedia - Computer Center Corporation
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Wikipedia - Computer checkers
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Wikipedia - Computer chess bet
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Wikipedia - Computer Chess (film)
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Wikipedia - Computer Chess
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Wikipedia - Computer chess -- Computer hardware and software capable of playing chess
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Wikipedia - Computer chip
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Wikipedia - Computer Chronicles -- American television broadcast on computer technology
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Wikipedia - Computer Clubhouse -- Out-of-school learning program
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Wikipedia - Computer cluster
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Wikipedia - Computer code
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Wikipedia - Computer compatibility
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Wikipedia - Computer components
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Wikipedia - Computer.com -- Dot-com company (1999-2000)
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Wikipedia - Computer configuration
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Wikipedia - Computer Conservation Society
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Wikipedia - Computer Consoles Inc.
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Wikipedia - Computer cooling
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Wikipedia - Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section -- United States federal law enforcement agency
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Wikipedia - Computer crime
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Wikipedia - Computer data storage -- Storage of digital data readable by computers
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Wikipedia - Computer dating
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Wikipedia - Computer Decisions -- computer magazine, monthly, 1970s & 1980s
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Wikipedia - Computer desk -- Furniture for computer users
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Wikipedia - Computer display standard -- Specification of display attributes
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Wikipedia - Computer displays
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Wikipedia - Computer display
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Wikipedia - Computer Emergency Readiness Team
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Wikipedia - Computer emergency response team -- Organisation which responds to computer security incidents
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Wikipedia - Computer emulator
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Wikipedia - Computer Engineer Barbie -- 126th career version of Mattel's Barbie doll
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Wikipedia - Computer Engineering
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Wikipedia - Computer engineering
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Wikipedia - Computer engineer
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Wikipedia - Computer Entertainment Rating Organization
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Wikipedia - Computer ethics
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Wikipedia - Computer facial animation
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Wikipedia - Computer fan
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Wikipedia - Computer files
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Wikipedia - Computer file -- Computer resource
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Wikipedia - Computer font -- Digital description of a typographical font
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Wikipedia - Computer forensics -- Branch of digital forensic science
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Wikipedia - Computer form factor -- Indication of size and mounting options of a computer or its components
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Wikipedia - Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
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Wikipedia - Computer fraud
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Wikipedia - Computer game bot Turing Test
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Wikipedia - Computer game bot
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Wikipedia - Computer Games Magazine
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Wikipedia - Computer games
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Wikipedia - Computer game
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Wikipedia - Computer gaming
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Wikipedia - Computer Gaming World
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Wikipedia - Computer-generated holography
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Wikipedia - Computer-generated imagery -- Application of computer graphics to create or contribute to images
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Wikipedia - Computer-generated music
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Wikipedia - Computer Go -- Field of artificial intelligence dedicated to creating a computer program that plays Go
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Wikipedia - Computer graphics (computer science) -- Sub-field of computer science
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Wikipedia - Computer graphics (disambiguation)
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Wikipedia - Computer Graphics International
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Wikipedia - Computer graphics lighting -- Simulation of light in computer graphics
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Wikipedia - Computer Graphics Metafile -- Image file format family
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Wikipedia - Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice
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Wikipedia - Computer Graphics
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Wikipedia - Computer graphics -- Graphics created using computers
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Wikipedia - Computer hackers
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Wikipedia - Computer hacking
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Wikipedia - Computer hardware platforms
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Wikipedia - Computer hardware -- Physical components of a computer
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Wikipedia - Computer History Museum
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Wikipedia - Computer image analysis
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Wikipedia - Computer industry
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Wikipedia - Computer Integrated Manufacturing
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Wikipedia - Computer-integrated manufacturing
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Wikipedia - Computer intelligence
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Wikipedia - Computer interface
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Wikipedia - Computerised National Identity Card -- Pakistani identity card
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Wikipedia - Computerized adaptive testing -- A form of computer-based test that adapts to the examinee's ability level
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Wikipedia - Computerized axial tomography
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Wikipedia - Computerized CBT
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Wikipedia - Computerized classification test
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Wikipedia - Computer (job description) -- Person performing mathematical calculations, before electronic computers became available
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Wikipedia - Computer Journal
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Wikipedia - Computer keyboard -- Computer keyboard hardware
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Wikipedia - Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge
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Wikipedia - Computer languages
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Wikipedia - Computer language
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Wikipedia - Computer Lib / Dream Machines
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Wikipedia - Computer Lib/Dream Machines
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Wikipedia - Computer Literacy Bookshops
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Wikipedia - Computer literacy
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Wikipedia - Computer Love (Zapp song) -- 1986 single by Zapp
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Wikipedia - Computer (magazine)
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Wikipedia - Computer Measurement Group
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Wikipedia - Computer mediated communication
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Wikipedia - Computer-mediated communication
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Wikipedia - Computer-mediated reality -- Ability to manipulate one's perception of reality through the use of a computer
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Wikipedia - Computer memory -- Device used on a computer for storing data
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Wikipedia - Computer Misuse Act 1990
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Wikipedia - Computer modeling
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Wikipedia - Computer model
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Wikipedia - Computer Modern -- Family of typefaces
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Wikipedia - Computer monitor -- Computer output device
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Wikipedia - Computer mouse -- Pointing device used to control a computer
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Wikipedia - Computer multitasking -- Concurrent execution of multiple processes
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Wikipedia - Computer Music Center
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Wikipedia - Computer Music Journal -- American peer-reviewed academic journal
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Wikipedia - Computer music
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Wikipedia - Computer network diagram
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Wikipedia - Computer networking
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Wikipedia - Computer network programming
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Wikipedia - Computer Networks (journal)
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Wikipedia - Computer Networks: The Heralds of Resource Sharing
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Wikipedia - Computer Networks
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Wikipedia - Computer networks
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Wikipedia - Computer network -- Network that allows computers to share resources and communicate with each other
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Wikipedia - Computer number format -- Internal representation of numeric values in a digital computer
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Wikipedia - Computer Numerical Control
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Wikipedia - Computer numerical control
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Wikipedia - Computer numeric control
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Wikipedia - Computer operator
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Wikipedia - Computer organisation
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Wikipedia - Computer Othello -- Abstract strategy game
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Wikipedia - Computer People for Peace -- American left-wing political organization
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Wikipedia - Computer performance by orders of magnitude
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Wikipedia - Computer performance
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Wikipedia - Computer peripherals
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Wikipedia - Computer Physics Communications
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Wikipedia - Computer Pioneer Award
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Wikipedia - Computer pioneer
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Wikipedia - Computer platform
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Wikipedia - Computer poker players
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Wikipedia - Computer poker player
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Wikipedia - Computer port (hardware) -- Computer hardware
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Wikipedia - Computer Power and Human Reason
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Wikipedia - Computer printer
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Wikipedia - Computer processing of body language
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Wikipedia - Computer processor
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Wikipedia - Computer process
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Wikipedia - Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
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Wikipedia - Computer programmers
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Wikipedia - Computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Computer programming in the punch card era
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Wikipedia - Computer programming in the punched card era
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Wikipedia - Computer programming language
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Wikipedia - Computer Programming
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Wikipedia - Computer programming -- Process that leads from an original formulation of a computing problem to executable computer programs
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Wikipedia - Computer Programs Directive
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Wikipedia - Computer programs
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Wikipedia - Computer program -- Instructions to be executed by a computer
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Wikipedia - Computer puzzle game
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Wikipedia - Computer rage -- Anger directed towards a computer
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Wikipedia - Computer reasoning
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Wikipedia - Computer repair technician -- Person who repairs and maintains computers and servers
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Wikipedia - Computer representation of surfaces
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Wikipedia - Computer Research Center of Islamic Sciences -- Iranian online Islamic resource
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Wikipedia - Computer reservation system
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Wikipedia - Computer revolution
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Wikipedia - Computer role playing game
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Wikipedia - Computer role-playing game
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Wikipedia - Computers and Intractability: A Guide to the Theory of NP-Completeness
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Wikipedia - Computers and Intractability
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Wikipedia - Computers and the environment
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Wikipedia - Computers and Typesetting
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Wikipedia - Computers and writing
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Wikipedia - Computer says no -- Decision making based on data but without common sense
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Wikipedia - Computer Science and Engineering
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Wikipedia - Computer science and engineering -- University academic program
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Wikipedia - Computer science education
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Wikipedia - Computer Science Ontology
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Wikipedia - Computer Science Press, Inc.
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Wikipedia - Computer Science Press
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Wikipedia - Computer Sciences Corporation
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Wikipedia - Computer sciences
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Wikipedia - Computer Science Teachers Association -- Professional association
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Wikipedia - Computer science theory
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Wikipedia - Computer Science Tripos
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Wikipedia - Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Computer science -- Study of the foundations and applications of computation
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Wikipedia - Computer scientists
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Wikipedia - Computer Scientist
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Wikipedia - Computer scientist -- Scientist specializing in computer science
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Wikipedia - Computer screen film -- Film subgenre where the action takes place entirely on a screen of a computer or a smartphone
|
Wikipedia - Computer screen
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Wikipedia - Computer security audit
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Wikipedia - Computer security compromised by hardware failure
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Wikipedia - Computer security conference
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Wikipedia - Computer security model -- Plan for specifying and enforcing security policies
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Wikipedia - Computer security software -- Computer program for information security
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Wikipedia - Computer Security
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Wikipedia - Computer security -- The protection of computer systems from theft or damage
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Wikipedia - Computer server
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Wikipedia - Computer services
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Wikipedia - Computers for African Schools -- American charity
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Wikipedia - Computershare -- Australian financial services company
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Wikipedia - Computer shogi
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Wikipedia - Computer Shopper (UK magazine)
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Wikipedia - Computer-simulated
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Wikipedia - Computer simulations
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Wikipedia - Computer simulation -- Process of mathematical modelling, performed on a computer
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Wikipedia - Computers in Entertainment
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Wikipedia - Computers in the classroom
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Wikipedia - Computer Society of India
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Wikipedia - Computer Society
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Wikipedia - Computer software
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Wikipedia - Computer Space -- 1971 space combat arcade game
|
Wikipedia - Computer speakers -- Type of speakers sold for use with computers
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Wikipedia - Computerspielemuseum Berlin
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Wikipedia - Computer stereo vision
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Wikipedia - Computer storage device
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Wikipedia - Computer storage
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Wikipedia - Computer-supported collaboration
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Wikipedia - Computer Supported Collaborative Learning
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Wikipedia - Computer-supported collaborative learning -- Pedagogical approach wherein learning takes place via social interaction using a computer or through the Internet
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Wikipedia - Computer Supported Cooperative Work
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Wikipedia - Computer supported cooperative work
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Wikipedia - Computer-supported cooperative work -- Field studying how people work in groups with the support of computing systems
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Wikipedia - Computers
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Wikipedia - Computer systems in the Soviet Union
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Wikipedia - Computer Systems Research Group
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Wikipedia - Computer systems
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Wikipedia - Computer system
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Wikipedia - Computer technician
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Wikipedia - Computer technology for developing areas
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Wikipedia - Computer technology
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Wikipedia - Computer terminal -- Computer input/output device; an electronic or electromechanical hardware device that is used for entering data into, and displaying data from, a computer or a computing system update programming
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Wikipedia - Computer!Totaal -- Dutch monthly magazine
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Wikipedia - Computer translation
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Wikipedia - Computer Usage Company
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Wikipedia - Computer user satisfaction
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Wikipedia - Computer video game
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Wikipedia - Computer viruses
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Wikipedia - Computer virus -- Computer program that modifies other programs to replicate itself and spread
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Wikipedia - Computer Vision Annotation Tool -- free and open source, web-based image and video annotation tool
|
Wikipedia - Computer vision dazzle -- A type of camouflage used to hamper facial recognition software
|
Wikipedia - Computer Vision
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Wikipedia - Computer vision -- Computerized information extraction from images
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Wikipedia - Computer wargame -- Wargame played on a computer or other digital device
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Wikipedia - Computer Weekly
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Wikipedia - Computer -- Automatic general-purpose device for performing arithmetic or logical operations
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Wikipedia - Computerwoche
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Wikipedia - Computer workstation
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Wikipedia - Computerworld UK
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Wikipedia - Computer World
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Wikipedia - ComputerWorld
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Wikipedia - Computerworld -- American information technology magazine
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Wikipedia - Computer worm -- Malware
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Wikipedia - Compute!'s Gazette -- Defunct US magazine about the Commodore computers
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Wikipedia - Compute! -- Defunct American home computer magazine
|
Wikipedia - Computex -- Taiwanese annual computer technology trade fair
|
Wikipedia - COM Structured Storage -- Computer technology developed by Microsoft
|
Wikipedia - Concepts, Techniques, and Models of Computer Programming
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Wikipedia - Conceptual model (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Concern (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Concise Command Language -- Computer language
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Wikipedia - Concurrency (computer science) -- Ability of different parts or units of a program, algorithm, or problem to be executed out-of-order or in partial order, without affecting the final outcome
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Wikipedia - Concurrent computer
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Wikipedia - Conditional (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
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Wikipedia - Conficker -- Computer worm
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Wikipedia - Connascence (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Connected (upcoming film) -- Upcoming American computer-animated science fiction comedy film
|
Wikipedia - Connor Freff Cochran -- American author and illustrator, computer and music industry journalist, publisher, producer, and business manager
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Wikipedia - Conor McBride -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Consensus (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Constant (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Constant (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Const (computer programming) -- Type qualifier
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Wikipedia - Constructor (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Content Security Policy -- Computer security standard to prevent cross-site scripting and related attacks
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Wikipedia - Context switch -- Switch between processes or tasks on a computer
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Wikipedia - Continuation -- representation of the control state of a computer program
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Wikipedia - Contract Net Protocol -- Computer task-sharing protocol
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Wikipedia - Control-Alt-Delete -- Computer keyboard shortcut that triggers a reboot or system security function
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Wikipedia - Control Data Corporation -- Defunct supercomputer firm
|
Wikipedia - Control-X -- Computer command
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Wikipedia - Conversational user interface -- Computer interface that emulates a conversation with a human
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Wikipedia - Convex Computer
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Wikipedia - Cookie stuffing -- Computer affiliate marketing technique
|
Wikipedia - Cooler Master -- Taiwanese computer hardware company
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Wikipedia - CopSSH -- Remote shell services or command execution for secure network services between two networked computers
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Wikipedia - Cordelia Schmid -- Computer vision researcher
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Wikipedia - Cordell Green -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Core-and-pod -- Computer network design
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Wikipedia - Core dump -- Record of computer memory data at one moment
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Wikipedia - Corinna Cortes -- Danish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Cornell box -- Computer graphics 3D reference model
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Wikipedia - Correctness (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Corsair Gaming -- American computer peripherals and hardware company
|
Wikipedia - Corvette (computer) -- Series of personal home computers
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Wikipedia - Cotton Candy (single-board computer)
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Wikipedia - Countermeasure (computer)
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Wikipedia - Coupling (computer programming) -- Degree of interdependence between software modules
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Wikipedia - Coupling (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Covariance and contravariance (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Covert channel -- Computer security attack that creates a capability to transfer information between processes that are not supposed to be allowed to communicate
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Wikipedia - CPL (programming language) -- Multi-paradigm computer programming language
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Wikipedia - Craig Gentry (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Craig Larman -- Canadian-born computer scientist, author, and organizational development consultant
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Wikipedia - Craig McClanahan -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Craig Neidorf -- Computer hacker
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Wikipedia - Craig Reynolds (computer graphics) -- American computer graphics expert
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Wikipedia - Craig Steven Wright -- Australian computer scientist and businessman
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Wikipedia - Crash (computing) -- When a computer program stops functioning properly and self-terminates
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Wikipedia - Crash (magazine) -- Computer magazine
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Wikipedia - Cray-1 -- Supercomputer manufactured by Cray Research
|
Wikipedia - Cray Urika-GD -- Graph discovery appliance, made by supercomputer maker Cray
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Wikipedia - Cray Urika-XA -- Extreme analytics platform, manufactured by supercomputer maker Cray
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Wikipedia - Cray -- American supercomputer manufacturer
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Wikipedia - Cray XC30 -- Supercomputer manufactured by Cray
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Wikipedia - Cray XC50 -- Supercomputer manufactured by Cray
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Wikipedia - Cray XT3 -- Distributed memory massively parallel MIMD supercomputer
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Wikipedia - Cray XT5 -- Family of supercomputers
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Wikipedia - Cray Y-MP -- Supercomputer by Cray Research
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Wikipedia - CRISPR/Cas Tools -- Computer software that aids design of guide RNAs for CRISPR gene editing
|
Wikipedia - Cristina Bazgan -- French computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Cristina Conati -- Italian and Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Crossfire (computer game)
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Wikipedia - Cross-platform software -- Computer software implemented on multiple computing platforms
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Wikipedia - Cross-site scripting -- Computer security vulnerability
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Wikipedia - CS50 -- Computer science course
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Wikipedia - CSIRAC -- Australia's first digital computer, and the fifth stored program computer in the world
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Wikipedia - C't -- German computer magazine
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Wikipedia - Cub Linux -- Computer operating system
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Wikipedia - Curry-Howard correspondence -- Isomorphism between computer programs and constructive mathematical proofs
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Wikipedia - Cursor (computers)
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Wikipedia - Curtis Yarvin -- American political blogger and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Custom PC (magazine) -- UK-based computer magazine
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Wikipedia - Cyberbullying -- Type of bullying occurs within electronic communication networking, the Internet and computer technology
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Wikipedia - Cybercrimes Act in Tanzania -- Law in Tanzania for criminalizing offences related to computer systems and Information Communication Technologies; provides for investigation, collection, and use of electronic evidence in Tanzania Mainland and Zanzibar
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Wikipedia - Cybercrime -- Crime involving a computer and a network
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Wikipedia - Cyberethics -- Philosophic study of ethics pertaining to computers
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Wikipedia - Cybernetics -- the study of computer of how governing automatic processes and communications
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Wikipedia - Cyberoam -- Computer security company
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Wikipedia - Cyclone (computer) -- Vacuum tube computer built by Iowa State College
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Wikipedia - Cynthia Beath -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Cynthia B. Lee -- Computer science lecturer at Stanford University
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Wikipedia - Cynthia Breazeal -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Cynthia Dwork -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Cynthia Rudin -- American computer scientist and statistician
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Wikipedia - Cynthia Solomon -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - DACAPO -- Quantum mechanical molecular dynamics computer code
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Wikipedia - Daemon (computer software)
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Wikipedia - Dahlia Malkhi -- Israeli-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dale Skeen -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dana Angluin -- Professor of computer science
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Wikipedia - Dana Moshkovitz -- Israeli theoretical computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dan Benjamin -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Dan Connolly (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dan Crow (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Dan Geer -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dangerous Dave in the Haunted Mansion -- Computer game
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Wikipedia - Daniel D. McCracken -- American computer scientist, academic, educator and writer
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Wikipedia - Daniel Jackson (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Daniel Kottke -- American computer engineer
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Wikipedia - Danielle Belgrave -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Danielle Feinberg -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Daniel Murphy (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Daniel Robbins (computer programmer) -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Daniel Shiffman -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Daniel Siewiorek -- American computer engineer
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Wikipedia - Daniel Weinreb -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Dan Ingalls -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dan Klein -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Danny Cohen (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Danny Dolev -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Danny Goodman -- American computer programmer, technology consultant
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Wikipedia - Dan Olsen -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Danqi Chen -- Chinese-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Danut Marcu -- Romanian mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dan Willard -- American computer scientist, logician, and professor
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Wikipedia - Daphne Koller -- Israeli-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Darius Kazemi -- Computer programmer and artist
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Wikipedia - Darwin (operating system) -- Computer operating system
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Wikipedia - Das Keyboard -- Series of computer keyboards sold by Metadot Corporation
|
Wikipedia - DASK -- First computer in Denmark, 1957
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Wikipedia - Database server -- Computer server providing database services
|
Wikipedia - Data center -- Building or room used to house computer servers and related equipment
|
Wikipedia - Data cleansing -- Correcting inaccurate computer records
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Wikipedia - Data (computing) -- Quantities, characters, or symbols on which operations are performed by a computer
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Wikipedia - Data control language -- Syntax similar to a computer programming language used to control access to data stored in a database
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Wikipedia - Data General Nova -- 16-bit minicomputer series
|
Wikipedia - Data link layer -- Point-to-point communications layer of the OSI model of computer networking
|
Wikipedia - Data scrubbing -- Computer error correction technique
|
Wikipedia - Data structure alignment -- The way data is arranged and accessed in computer memory, involving data alignment and data structure padding and packing, so that reads and writes to memory can be efficiently performed
|
Wikipedia - Data structure -- Particular way of storing and organizing data in a computer
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Wikipedia - David Abrahams (computer programmer)
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Wikipedia - David A. Smith (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - David Avis -- Canadian and British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David Bader (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David Baron (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David Coons -- Computer graphics and scanning professional
|
Wikipedia - David DeWitt -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David Eppstein -- American computer scientist and mathematician (born 1963)
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Wikipedia - David F. Bacon -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - David Hanson (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - David Hartley (computer scientist) -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David J. Brown (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - David J. Farber -- American computer scientist currently in Japan
|
Wikipedia - David Johnson-Davies -- Computer scientist and journalist
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Wikipedia - David Karger -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David Korn (computer scientist) -- American computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - David L. Mills -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David Lowe (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - David May (computer scientist) -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David Park (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - David Patterson (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - David Pearson, Computer Scientist
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Wikipedia - David Pearson (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - David P. Reed -- American computer scientist (born 1952)
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Wikipedia - David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
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Wikipedia - David R. Kaeli -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David Siegel (computer scientist) -- Computer scientist and entrepreneur (b. 1961)
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Wikipedia - David Silver (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - David Turner (computer scientist) -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David Ungar -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - David Watt (computer scientist) -- British computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - David Wheeler (British computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - David Wheeler (computer scientist) -- British computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - David Zuckerman (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Dawson Engler -- American computer scientist and professor
|
Wikipedia - Dazzle Draw -- Raster graphics editor for Apple II computers
|
Wikipedia - Dc (computer program)
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Wikipedia - DCEbus -- Late 20th century computer bus standard
|
Wikipedia - DDR SDRAM -- Type of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Deborah Estrin -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Deborah Frincke -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Deborah Joseph -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Deborah McGuinness -- American computer scientist, professor
|
Wikipedia - Deborah Washington Brown -- US computer scientist and speech recognition researcher
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Wikipedia - Debugger -- Computer program used to test and debug other programs
|
Wikipedia - Debugging -- Process of finding and resolving defects or problems within a computer program
|
Wikipedia - Decentralized application -- Type of computer application
|
Wikipedia - Decentralized autonomous organization -- Computer network organization model
|
Wikipedia - Decimal computer
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Wikipedia - Decision problem -- Yes/no problem in computer science
|
Wikipedia - Declaration (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Declaration (computer science)
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Wikipedia - DEC Multia -- Desktop computers
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Wikipedia - Decomposition (computer science)
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Wikipedia - DEC Professional (computer)
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Wikipedia - DECUS -- Independent computer user group related to Digital Equipment Corporation
|
Wikipedia - Deep Blue (chess computer) -- Chess-playing computer made by IBM
|
Wikipedia - Deep Medhi -- Indo-American computer scientist and inventor
|
Wikipedia - Deep Thought (chess computer)
|
Wikipedia - Default gateway -- Node in a computer network
|
Wikipedia - Deforestation (computer science)
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Wikipedia - DEGIMA (computer cluster)
|
Wikipedia - Dekatron -- Early and obsolete type of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Delay line memory -- Early type of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Dell M1000e -- Computer
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Wikipedia - Dell -- American multinational computer technology corporation
|
Wikipedia - Dell XPS -- Line of high performance computers manufactured by Dell
|
Wikipedia - Deltaco -- Swedish computer hardware company
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Wikipedia - Demetri Terzopoulos -- American professor of computer science
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Wikipedia - Demi Getschko -- Brazilian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Demoscene -- Computer art subculture
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Wikipedia - Dennis L. Montgomery -- Computer software designer
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Wikipedia - Dennis Ritchie -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Department of Computer Science and Technology, University of Cambridge
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Wikipedia - Department of Computer Science of TU Darmstadt -- Department of Computer Science of the Technische UniversitM-CM-$t Darmstadt
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Wikipedia - Department of Computer Science, University of Bristol
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Wikipedia - Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Wikipedia - Department of Computer Science, University of Manchester
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Wikipedia - Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford -- Department of the University of Oxford
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Wikipedia - Department of Computer Science (University of Toronto)
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Wikipedia - Department of Defense Information Assurance Certification and Accreditation Process -- Computer security process
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Wikipedia - Dependency (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Deployment environment -- Computer system in which a computer program or software component is deployed and executed
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Wikipedia - Derek Atkins -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Derive (computer algebra system)
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Wikipedia - Design Automation Standards Committee -- Oversees IEEE Standards that are related to computer-aided design
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Wikipedia - Design pattern (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Desktop Computer
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Wikipedia - Desktop computer -- Computer designed to be used on a fixed location
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Wikipedia - Desktop metaphor -- Concept used on desktop computer graphical user interfaces
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Wikipedia - Desktop publishing -- Creation of documents using page layout skills on a personal computer
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Wikipedia - Desktop replacement computer -- Larger, bulkier laptop designed to replace a desktop
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Wikipedia - Destructor (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Deterministic parsing -- Parsing related to computer science
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Wikipedia - Developer Transition Kit -- Prototype ARM-based Mac computer
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Wikipedia - Device driver -- Computer program
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Wikipedia - Diablo Data Systems -- Computer hardware company, printers, disk drives
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Wikipedia - Diamond-based quantum computer
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Wikipedia - Diamond-square algorithm -- Method for generating heightmaps for computer graphics
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Wikipedia - Diana McSherry -- American computer scientist and biophysicist
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Wikipedia - Diana Merry -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Diane Gromala -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Diane Kelly (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Diane Souvaine -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dianna Xu -- Mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dick Smith (software) -- Chicago, Illinois-based software engineer, computer consultant and a science fiction fanzine publisher
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Wikipedia - Differentiable neural computer -- Artificial neural network architecture
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Wikipedia - Digital Accessible Information System -- Technical standard for digital audiobooks, periodicals and computerized text
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Wikipedia - Digital audio workstation -- computer workstation or software application used for editing and creating music and audio
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Wikipedia - Digital computers
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Wikipedia - Digital computer
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Wikipedia - Digital Data Storage -- Computer data storage technology based on magnetic tape
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Wikipedia - Digital Equipment Corporation -- U.S. computer manufacturer 1957-1998
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Wikipedia - Digital fur -- Computer generated imagery technique
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Wikipedia - Digital library -- Online database of digital objects stored in electronic media formats and accessible via computers
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Wikipedia - Digital signal processing -- Mathematical signal manipulation by computers
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Wikipedia - DikuMUD -- Multiplayer text-based role-playing computer game from 1991
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Wikipedia - Dilution of precision (computer graphics) -- Computer graphics algorithmic method
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Wikipedia - Dina Katabi -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dinosaur (film) -- 2000 American computer-animated adventure film by Eric Leighton and Ralph Zondag
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Wikipedia - Direct mind-computer interface
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Wikipedia - Dirty COW -- Computer security vulnerability
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Wikipedia - Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Disney Magic Kingdoms -- 2016 world builder mobile and computer game based on the Disney theme parks
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Wikipedia - Disparate system -- Data processing system without interaction with other computer data processing systems
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Wikipedia - Distinguished Fellow of the British Computer Society
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Wikipedia - Distributed computing -- System whose components are located on different networked computers
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Wikipedia - Distributed Interactive Simulation -- IEEE standard for real-time platform-level wargaming across multiple host computers
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Wikipedia - Distributed Overlay Virtual Ethernet -- Tunneling and virtualization technology for computer networks
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Wikipedia - Dive computer -- Instrument to record dive profile and calculate decompression obligations in real time
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Wikipedia - Divergence (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Dixie Garr -- American computer engineer
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Wikipedia - DJ Patil -- American mathematician and computer scientist (born 1974)
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Wikipedia - DjVu -- Computer file format
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Wikipedia - DOCSIS -- Standard for computer networking over a cable television system
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Wikipedia - Documation -- American computer hardware manufacturer
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Wikipedia - Document-oriented database -- A document-oriented NoSQL database, or document store, is a computer program designed for storing, retrieving and managing semi-structured, document-oriented information.
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Wikipedia - Doel (computer)
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Wikipedia - Domain Name System -- Hierarchical distributed naming system for computers, services, or any resource connected to the Internet or a private network
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Wikipedia - Domain (software engineering) -- target subject of a computer program
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Wikipedia - Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences
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Wikipedia - Donald Knuth -- American computer scientist, mathematician, and professor emeritus at Stanford University
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Wikipedia - Don Fussell -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dorcas Muthoni -- Kenyan computer engineer and businesswoman
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Wikipedia - Dorit Aharonov -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Doron A. Peled -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dorothea Blostein -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dorothea Wagner -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dorothy Blum -- American computer scientist and cryptanalyst
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Wikipedia - Dorothy McEwen Kildall -- American [[microcomputer]] industry pioneer
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Wikipedia - Dorothy Monekosso -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Dorothy Stein -- American psychologist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Double-precision floating-point format -- 64-bit computer number format
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Wikipedia - Douglas Crockford -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Download -- Computer file operation
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Wikipedia - Do You Trust This Computer?
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Wikipedia - Draft:Astronomical Data Query Language -- Computer language for astronomical data
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Wikipedia - Draft:Brett Buerhaus -- American computer security researcher
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Wikipedia - Draft:Luke Aaron Reynolds -- Australian-born Computer Scientist
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Wikipedia - Draft:Nazir Peroz -- German computer scientist researching IT in developing countries
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Wikipedia - Draft:Oleksandr Kosovan -- Inventor, computer engineer
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Wikipedia - Draft:Pyg and Tam: Loves babies -- American computer-animated streaming television series produced by DreamWorks Animation
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Wikipedia - Draft:Sadegh Nobari -- computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Draft:Snehasis Banerjee -- Indian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Draft:Vincent Troia -- Computer security professional
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Wikipedia - Dragon 32/64 -- Home computer model
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Wikipedia - Dragon Book (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Drive-by download -- Unintended download of computer software from the Internet, either M-bM-^QM- which a person has authorized but without understanding the consequences or M-bM-^QM-! download that happens without a person's knowledge, often a computer virus, spyware, malware
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Wikipedia - Drude Berntsen -- Norwegian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Drugwars -- Turn-based strategy computer game created in 1984
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Wikipedia - Dungeon (computer game)
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Wikipedia - Dungeons > Dragons Computer Fantasy Game
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Wikipedia - Duqu -- Collection of computer malware discovered in 2011
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Wikipedia - Dword (Computer)
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Wikipedia - Dynabook -- Early portable computer concept
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Wikipedia - Dynamic random-access memory -- Type of computer memory
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Wikipedia - Dynamic simulation -- Computer modeling of time-varying behavior of a dynamical system
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Wikipedia - E3 -- American annual computer and video game industry trade event
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Wikipedia - East Front (video game) -- 1997 computer wargame
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Wikipedia - ECC memory -- Self-correcting computer data storage
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Wikipedia - Eckert-Mauchly Computer Company
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Wikipedia - Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation
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Wikipedia - ECSE (Academic Degree) -- Academic Degree in computer science
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Wikipedia - Edda Sveinsdottir -- Icelandic/Danish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Eddie Kohler -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Edit distance -- Computer science metric of string similarity
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Wikipedia - Edith Cohen -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Edith Elkind -- Estonian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Edmund M. Clarke -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ed Roberts (computer engineer) -- American engineer, entrepreneur and doctor
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Wikipedia - Ed Roberts (computers)
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Wikipedia - EDSAC 2 -- Early computer from 1958
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Wikipedia - EDSAC -- 1940s-1950s British computer
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Wikipedia - Edsger W. Dijkstra -- Dutch computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Edson Hendricks -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - EDVAC -- One of the earliest electronic computers, delivered in 1949
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Wikipedia - Edward W. Veitch -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Edwin Catmull -- Computer scientist and former president of Pixar
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Wikipedia - EEPROM -- Computer memory used for small quantities of data
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Wikipedia - E-GIF -- Scheme for ensuring the inter-operation of computer-based systems
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Wikipedia - Egocentric vision -- Type of computer vision
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Wikipedia - Eiichi Goto -- Japanese computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Elaine M. McGraw -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Elaine Oran -- American aerospace engineer, computer scientist, physicist
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Wikipedia - Elaine Shi -- Chinese and American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Elaine Weyuker -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Elanor Huntington -- Australian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Elbrus (computer)
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Wikipedia - Elbrus supercomputer
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Wikipedia - Eleanor Ireland -- Early British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Eleazar Eskin -- American computer scientist and geneticist
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Wikipedia - Electra (supercomputer) -- NASA supercomputer
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Wikipedia - Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Electrochemical RAM -- Novel type of computer memory
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Wikipedia - Electronic computers
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Wikipedia - Electronic computer
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Wikipedia - Eleni Stroulia -- Greek/Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Elette Boyle -- American and Israeli computer scientist and cryptographer
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Wikipedia - Elham Kashefi -- Computer scientist and quantum computing researcher
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Wikipedia - Elisabeth Andre -- German Computer Scientist from Saarlouis.
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Wikipedia - Elizabeth Belding -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Elizabeth Langdon Williams -- American human computer and astronomer
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Wikipedia - Elizabeth O'Neil -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Elizabeth Rather -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - ELIZA -- Early natural language processing computer program
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Wikipedia - Ellen Fetter -- American computer scientist and chaos theory researcher
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Wikipedia - Ellen Gethner -- American mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ellen Spertus -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ellen Voorhees -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ellen W. Zegura -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Elliot Koffman -- American computer scientist and educationist
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Wikipedia - Elliott Brothers (computer company)
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Wikipedia - Elsie Shutt -- American computer programmer and entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Elvira Mayordomo -- Spanish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Elvis operator -- Binary operator in computer programming
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Wikipedia - Elza Erkip -- American computer engineer
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Wikipedia - EMachines eOne -- Desktop computer
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Wikipedia - EMac -- All-in-one desktop computer designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Computer, Inc.
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Wikipedia - E. Mark Gold -- American physicist, mathematician, and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Embedded computer
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Wikipedia - Embedded system -- Computer system with a dedicated function within a larger mechanical or electrical system
|
Wikipedia - Emily Mower Provost -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Emma Hart (computer scientist) -- English computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Emma Haruka Iwao -- Japanese computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Emmanuel Mogenet -- French computer engineer
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Wikipedia - Emo Welzl -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Encapsulation (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Encapsulation (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Encore Computer
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Wikipedia - Endianness -- Order of bytes in a computer word
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Wikipedia - End-of-file -- Offset that corresponds to the first byte beyond the length of a computer file
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Wikipedia - End system -- Computers connected to a computer network
|
Wikipedia - End-to-end principle -- design principle for computer networking
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Wikipedia - End-user (computer science)
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Wikipedia - ENIAC -- First electronic general-purpose digital computer
|
Wikipedia - Enid Mumford -- British social scientist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Enrique Alba -- Spanish computer science professor (born 1968)
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Wikipedia - Enter key -- Key on computer keyboards
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Wikipedia - Enumerator (in theoretical computer science)
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Wikipedia - EPIC (form factor) -- Computer form factor for a single board computer
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Wikipedia - Epoch Co. -- Japanese toy and computer games company
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Wikipedia - Epoch Game Pocket Computer -- Handheld game console by Epoch Co.
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Wikipedia - EPROM -- Early type of solid state computer memory
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Wikipedia - Erable -- computer algebra system for Hewlett-Packard graphing calculators
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Wikipedia - Eric Allman -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Eric Bach -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Eric Brewer (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Eric Gilbert -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Eric Haines -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Eric Horvitz -- American computer scientist, and Technical Fellow at Microsoft
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Wikipedia - Eric Sink -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Eric S. Raymond -- American computer programmer, author, and advocate for the open source movement
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Wikipedia - Erik Bloodaxe (hacker) -- Computer hacker
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Wikipedia - Erik Demaine -- Professor of Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Erik Meijer (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Erik Naggum -- Norwegian computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Ernest Friedman-Hill -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Ernst-Rudiger Olderog -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Escom (computer company)
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Wikipedia - ESET NOD32 -- Computer protection software
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Wikipedia - Espresso heuristic logic minimizer -- computer program for complexity reduction of digital logic circuits
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Wikipedia - EternalBlue -- Computer security exploit
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Wikipedia - Ethel Bellamy -- English astronomical computer and seismologist
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Wikipedia - Ethernet -- Computer networking technology
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Wikipedia - Eugene M. Luks -- American mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - European Association for Theoretical Computer Science
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Wikipedia - European Computer Manufacturers Association
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Wikipedia - European Conference on Computer Vision
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Wikipedia - Evelyn Berezin -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Event-driven programming -- Computer programming paradigm
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Wikipedia - Evgeniy Gabrilovich -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Evil maid attack -- Type of computer security breach
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Wikipedia - Evolved antenna -- Antenna designed by an evolutionary computer algorithm
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Wikipedia - Ewa Deelman -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ewin Tang -- American computer scientist (born 2000)
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Wikipedia - Exception (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Execution (computers)
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Wikipedia - Execution (computing) -- running of a program by a computer
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Wikipedia - Expansion card -- Circuit board able to be connected to a computer system to add functionality
|
Wikipedia - Expensive Desk Calculator -- Computer program
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Wikipedia - Expensive Tape Recorder -- Computer program
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Wikipedia - Expensive Typewriter -- Computer program
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Wikipedia - Exploit (computer security)
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Wikipedia - Expression (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Expressive power (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Extensible Host Controller Interface -- Computer interface specification
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Wikipedia - FACOM 100 -- Japanese relay-based electromechanical computer
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Wikipedia - FACT (computer language)
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Wikipedia - FACT computer language
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Wikipedia - Fahiem Bacchus -- Canadian professor of computer science
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Wikipedia - Fail2ban -- Intrusion prevention software framework that protects computer servers from brute-force attacks
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Wikipedia - Failover -- Automatic switching to a standby computer system or component upon the failure of a previously active system or component
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Wikipedia - Fallout (computer game)
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Wikipedia - Family Computer Disk System
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Wikipedia - FastBack -- Backup program for personal computers
|
Wikipedia - Father Christmas (computer worm)
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Wikipedia - Fault-tolerant computer system
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Wikipedia - FDA Adverse Event Reporting System -- US FDA supporting computerized database
|
Wikipedia - F. David Boswell -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Feature detection (computer vision)
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Wikipedia - Federal Computer Week
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Wikipedia - Fe FET -- Novel computer memory type
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Wikipedia - Fellow of the British Computer Society
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Wikipedia - Feng-hsiung Hsu -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Fengqi You -- professor and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Fermat (computer algebra system)
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Wikipedia - Fernanda Viegas -- Brazilian-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ferranti MRT -- Application-specific handheld computer
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Wikipedia - Ferroelectric RAM -- Novel type of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Fiber (computer science) -- Lightweight thread of execution in the field of computer science
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Wikipedia - FidoNet -- International computer network
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Wikipedia - Field (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Fifth Generation Computer Systems project
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Wikipedia - Fifth Generation Computer
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Wikipedia - Fifth generation computer
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Wikipedia - Filename -- Text string used to uniquely identify a computer file
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Wikipedia - File size -- Measure of data usage by computer files
|
Wikipedia - Files transferred over shell protocol -- Computer protocol
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Wikipedia - Finale Doshi-Velez -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Fire HD -- Tablet computer manufactured by Amazon
|
Wikipedia - First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC -- First published description of the logical design of a stored-program computer
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Wikipedia - First-order logic -- Collection of formal systems used in mathematics, philosophy, linguistics, and computer science
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Wikipedia - Fixed-point arithmetic -- Computer format for representing real numbers
|
Wikipedia - FJG RAM -- Novel type of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - FLAIM -- Modular tool designed to allow computer and network log sharing
|
Wikipedia - Flame (malware) -- Modular computer malware discovered in 2012
|
Wikipedia - Flash memory -- Electronic non-volatile computer storage device
|
Wikipedia - Flat network -- Type of computer network design
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Wikipedia - Flavors (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Floating-point arithmetic -- Computer format for representing real numbers
|
Wikipedia - Flooding (computer networking)
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Wikipedia - FLOPS -- Measure of computer performance
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Wikipedia - Fluid Framework -- computer platform for real-time collaboration across applications
|
Wikipedia - Flynn's taxonomy -- Classification of computer architectures
|
Wikipedia - FM-7 -- 1982 Fujitsu home computer
|
Wikipedia - FM Towns -- Japanese personal computer
|
Wikipedia - Forky Asks a Question -- Series of computer-generated animated short films by Pixar
|
Wikipedia - Forrest N. Iandola -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Foundations and Trends in Theoretical Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Fourth-generation programming language -- Group of computer programming languages
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Wikipedia - Fractint -- Computer program to render and display many kinds of fractals
|
Wikipedia - Fragmentation (computer)
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Wikipedia - Frances Allen -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Frances A. Rosamond -- Australian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Francesca Rossi -- Italian computer scientist, University of Padova
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Wikipedia - Frances Spence -- American physicist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Francine Berman -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Francois Fluckiger -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Francois Lionet -- French computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Franc Solina -- Slovene computer scientist and university professor
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Wikipedia - Franz Josef Och -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Frederic T. Chong -- American computer scientist and professor
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Wikipedia - Fred W. Glover -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Free Birds -- 2013 American 3D computer-animated buddy comedy film directed by Jimmy Hayward
|
Wikipedia - French Institute for Research in Computer Science and Automation
|
Wikipedia - Frieder Nake -- German mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Frozen (2013 film) -- 2013 computer animated film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios
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Wikipedia - Fugaku (supercomputer)
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Wikipedia - Fujitsu Computer Products of America -- American computer products company
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Wikipedia - Fujitsu Siemens Computers -- 1999-2009 Japanese-German computer technology company
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Wikipedia - Full disclosure (computer security) -- Policy in computer security
|
Wikipedia - Fulufhelo Nelwamondo -- Fulufhelo Nelwamondo (1982-) is a South African engineer and computer scientist known for his work on computational intelligence techniques
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Wikipedia - Functional Programming Languages and Computer Architecture
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Wikipedia - Function composition (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Function (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Function key -- Key on aM-BM- computerM-BM- orM-BM- terminalM-BM- keyboard
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Wikipedia - Fundamental matrix (computer vision)
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Wikipedia - Fun.exe virus -- computer virus
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Wikipedia - Futurebus -- 1980s computer bus standard that saw limited use
|
Wikipedia - Gabriela Ochoa -- Venezuelan British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Gadget (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Gail C. Murphy -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Gail Williams -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Gameframe -- Hybrid computer system
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Wikipedia - GamesMaster (magazine) -- Multi-format computer and video game magazine
|
Wikipedia - Games-X -- defunct computer and video games magazine 1991-1992
|
Wikipedia - Gaming computer -- Desktop or laptop computer meant for running demanding video games and other applications
|
Wikipedia - GammaFax -- First personal computer fax board
|
Wikipedia - G. Anthony Gorry -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - GAP (computer algebra system)
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Wikipedia - Garbage collection (computer science) -- Form of automatic memory management
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Wikipedia - Garbage (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Gary Gadget -- Series of computer games
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Wikipedia - Gary Kildall -- American computer scientist and microcomputer entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Gary Miller (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Gaston Gonnet -- Computer Scientist, Entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Gates-Dell Complex -- Computer Science department at the University of Texas at Austin
|
Wikipedia - Gateway (computer networking)
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Wikipedia - Gauntlet (keyboard) -- Wireless glove that can be used as a computer keyboard input device
|
Wikipedia - Gaze-contingency paradigm -- Techniques for changing computer screen display depending on where the viewer is looking
|
Wikipedia - GeForce -- Range of computer graphics cards by Nvidia
|
Wikipedia - Gemini Guidance Computer
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Wikipedia - Gene Amdahl -- American computer architect and high-tech entrepreneur
|
Wikipedia - General-purpose computer
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Wikipedia - Generator (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Generator (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Genetic memory (computer science)
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Wikipedia - GeneXus -- Computer programming tool
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Wikipedia - Geoffrey Hinton -- British-Canadian computer scientist and psychologist
|
Wikipedia - Geologic modelling -- Applied science of creating computerized representations of portions of the Earth's crust
|
Wikipedia - GEORGE (computer) -- Computer built in 1957 by Argonne National Laboratory
|
Wikipedia - George Coulouris (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - George Danezis -- Computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - George Hotz -- celebrity computer engineer
|
Wikipedia - George N. Baird -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - George Perlegos -- Computer scientist and engineer
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Wikipedia - George Sadowsky -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Georg Essl -- Austrian computer scientist and musician
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Wikipedia - George Stibitz -- Bell Labs researcher; one of the fathers of the modern first digital computer
|
Wikipedia - Georg Gottlob -- Austrian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Georgia Institute of Technology School of Computational Science & Engineering -- School of computer science in Atlanta, Georgia
|
Wikipedia - Georgia Institute of Technology School of Computer Science
|
Wikipedia - Georgia Tech Online Master of Science in Computer Science
|
Wikipedia - Geraldine Fitzpatrick -- Australian computer scientist in Vienna
|
Wikipedia - Gerald Jay Sussman -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Gerard Le Lann -- French computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Gerhard Hund -- German mathematician, computer scientist and chess player
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Wikipedia - Gerth Stolting Brodal -- Danish computer scientist and professor
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Wikipedia - Ghostball (computer virus)
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Wikipedia - Ghost work -- Type of conditions of computer work
|
Wikipedia - Gil Kalai -- Israeli mathematician and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Gillian Dobbie -- NZ computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Gillian Docherty -- British computer scientist and CEO
|
Wikipedia - Gillian Lovegrove -- British computer scientist and academic
|
Wikipedia - GITEX -- Computer and electronics trade show
|
Wikipedia - Giulio Prisco -- Italian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - GLaDOS -- Artificially superintelligent computer system in the Portal series of video games
|
Wikipedia - Glen Kuban -- American computer programmer and independent investigator
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Wikipedia - Glenn Ricart -- Computer scientist and Internet pioneer
|
Wikipedia - Glitch -- Short-lived fault in a computer system
|
Wikipedia - Global illumination -- Group of rendering algorithms used in 3D computer graphics
|
Wikipedia - Gloria Gordon Bolotsky -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Glossary of backup terms -- List of definitions of terms and jargon related to computer data backups
|
Wikipedia - Glossary of computer chess terms -- Wikipedia glossary
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Wikipedia - Glossary of computer graphics
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Wikipedia - Glossary of computer hardware terms
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Wikipedia - Glossary of computer science -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in computer science
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Wikipedia - Glossary of computer software terms -- Wikipedia glossary
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Wikipedia - G. M. Nijssen -- Dutch computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Gnomeo & Juliet -- computer-animated film loosely based on ''Romeo and Juliet''
|
Wikipedia - GnosticPlayers -- Computer hacking group
|
Wikipedia - Good Morning Today -- Computer-animated television show
|
Wikipedia - Google Fuchsia -- Computer operating system by Google
|
Wikipedia - Google Glass -- Optical head-mounted computer glasses
|
Wikipedia - Gordon Bell -- American computer engineer
|
Wikipedia - Gordon Daugherty -- American computer scientist and author
|
Wikipedia - Gordon Eubanks -- American computer pioneer
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Wikipedia - Gordon Kindlmann -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Government hacking -- Computer hacking perpetrated by governments
|
Wikipedia - GPD Win 2 -- Handheld Windows gaming computer
|
Wikipedia - GPD Win Max -- [[Handheld PC| ]]Handheld Windows gaming computer
|
Wikipedia - Grace Hopper -- American computer scientist and US Navy admiral (1906-1992)
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Wikipedia - Grace Murray Hopper Award -- Computer science award
|
Wikipedia - Grammar checker -- Computer program that verifies written text for grammatical correctness
|
Wikipedia - Graph (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Graphics display resolution -- Width and height of an electronic visual display device, such as a computer monitor, in pixels
|
Wikipedia - Graphite (software) -- Tool that monitors and graphs the performance of computer systems
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Wikipedia - Greedy algorithm -- This article describes a type of algorithmic approach that is used to solve computer science problems
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Wikipedia - Grid Compass -- Early laptop computer
|
Wikipedia - Grid computing -- Use of widely distributed computer resources to reach a common goal
|
Wikipedia - Grigore Rosu -- Computer science professor
|
Wikipedia - Group (computing) -- Grouping of users as part of an access control system on a computer
|
Wikipedia - Groupe Bull -- French-owned computer company
|
Wikipedia - GST Computer Systems -- Group of computer companies based in Cambridge
|
Wikipedia - Gtkmm -- Computer Program
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Wikipedia - Gtranslator -- Free computer-assisted translation software
|
Wikipedia - Guard (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Gudrun J. Klinker -- German computer scientist and professor
|
Wikipedia - Gul Agha (computer scientist)
|
Wikipedia - Gumstix -- Company that makes similarly named single board computers
|
Wikipedia - Gustafson's law -- Theoretical speedup formula in computer architecture
|
Wikipedia - Gutmann method -- Algorithm for securely erasing computer hard drives
|
Wikipedia - Guy L. Steele Jr. -- American computer scientist (born 1954)
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Wikipedia - H2Ceramic cooling -- Computer cooling product
|
Wikipedia - Hack (computer code)
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Wikipedia - Hacker (computer security)
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Wikipedia - Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution -- 1984 non-fiction book by Steven Levy
|
Wikipedia - Hacktivism -- Use of computers and computer networks as a means of protest to promote political ends
|
Wikipedia - Hack (video game) -- Computer game
|
Wikipedia - Hagit Attiya -- Israeli computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Hagit Hel-Or -- Israeli computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Haitao Zheng -- Chinese-American computer scientist and engineer
|
Wikipedia - HAL Computer Systems
|
Wikipedia - Half-precision floating-point format -- 16-bit computer number format
|
Wikipedia - Hampton Catlin -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Handheld computer
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Wikipedia - Handheld PC -- Computer that is significantly smaller than a laptop
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Wikipedia - Hank Levy (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Hannah Bast -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Hans-Jurgen Appelrath -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Hans-Paul Schwefel -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Hans Reiser -- American computer programmer, entrepreneur, and convicted murderer
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Wikipedia - Hao Li -- American computer scientist & university professor
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Wikipedia - Harald Ganzinger -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Harbour (programming language) -- Computer programming language
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Wikipedia - Hardware acceleration -- Use of specialized computer hardware to perform some functions more efficiently than is possible in software running on a more general-purpose CPU
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Wikipedia - Hardware description language -- Specialized computer language used to describe the structure and behavior of electronic circuits, and most commonly, digital logic circuits
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Wikipedia - Hardware virtualization -- The virtualization of computers or operating systems
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Wikipedia - Harlan Anderson -- American computer engineer and entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Harlan Mills -- Computer science professor
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Wikipedia - Harold Thimbleby -- British computer scientist (born 1955)
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Wikipedia - Harri Hursti -- Finnish computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Harry Buhrman -- Dutch Computer Scientist
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Wikipedia - Harry R. Lewis -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Harvard Computers
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Wikipedia - Hava Siegelmann -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Havoc Pennington -- American computer engineer and entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Hawkboard -- Single board computer
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Wikipedia - Hawk-Eye -- Computer vision system
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Wikipedia - Hayes Microcomputer Products -- U.S.-based manufacturer of modems
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Wikipedia - Hazard (computer architecture)
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Wikipedia - Headless computer
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Wikipedia - Head-of-line blocking -- A performance-limiting phenomenon in computer network data transfer
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Wikipedia - Heap (data structure) -- Computer science data structure
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Wikipedia - Hector Garcia-Molina -- Mexican computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Heikki Mannila -- Finnish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - HeinrichsWeikamp -- German manufacturer of dive computers and other underwater electronics for recreational diving.
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Wikipedia - He Jifeng -- Chinese computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Helmut Veith -- Austrian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Hemchandra Kekre -- Indian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Henriette Avram -- American computer programmer and system analyst
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Wikipedia - Henri Gouraud (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Henry Baker (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Herb Sutter -- US computer programmer and author
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Wikipedia - Hercules Computer Technology
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Wikipedia - Herman Lukoff -- American computer pioneer
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Wikipedia - Hermann Bottenbruch -- German mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Heuristic (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Hex dump -- Hexadecimal view of computer data
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Wikipedia - Hidden-surface determination -- Visibility in 3D computer graphics
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Wikipedia - HiFive Unleashed -- Single board computer development board
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Wikipedia - Hilary Kahn -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Hiroshi Ishii (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - History of CAD software -- Computer-aided design software
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Wikipedia - History of computer and video games
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Wikipedia - History of computer animation
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Wikipedia - History of computer games
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Wikipedia - History of computer hardware in Bulgaria
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Wikipedia - History of computer hardware in Soviet Bloc countries
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Wikipedia - History of computer hardware in Yugoslavia
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Wikipedia - History of computer hardware
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Wikipedia - History of computer science -- Aspect of history
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Wikipedia - History of computers
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Wikipedia - History of computing hardware -- From early calculation aids to modern day computers
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Wikipedia - History of IBM -- Evolution of the American computer company
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Wikipedia - History of personal computers
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Wikipedia - History of the Internet -- History of the Internet, a global system of interconnected computer networks
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Wikipedia - HM-aM-;M-^S Thanh ViM-aM-;M-^Gt -- Vietnamese computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Holly Rushmeier -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Homebrew Computer Club -- Computer hobbyist users' group in California
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Wikipedia - Home computer -- Class of microcomputers
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Wikipedia - Homeworld: Deserts of Kharak -- Real-time strategy computer game
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Wikipedia - Homeworld -- 1999 real-time strategy computer game
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Wikipedia - Horizon (IT system) -- Computer system used by Post Office Ltd.
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Wikipedia - Hostname -- Label that is assigned to a device connected to a computer network
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Wikipedia - Host (network) -- computer or other device connected to a computer network
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Wikipedia - Hot spot (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Howard H. Aiken -- Pioneer in computing, original conceptual designer behind IBM's Harvard Mark I computer
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Wikipedia - Howard Schmidt -- American computer security expert
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Wikipedia - HP-1000/RTE -- 1966 real-time computer system from HP
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Wikipedia - HP Pavilion (computer)
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Wikipedia - HP Pavilion -- Line of computers produced by Hewlett-Packard
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Wikipedia - HSLuv -- A color space for computer displays
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Wikipedia - Hugh Darwen -- English academic and writer about computers
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Wikipedia - Hughes Dynamics -- American computer firm
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Wikipedia - Hugh McGregor Ross -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Hugo Brandt Corstius -- Dutch computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Human Biocomputer
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Wikipedia - Human biocomputer
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Wikipedia - Human Computer Information Retrieval
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Wikipedia - Human Computer Interaction
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Wikipedia - Human-Computer Interaction
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Wikipedia - Human-computer Interaction
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Wikipedia - Human computer interaction
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Wikipedia - Humancomputer interaction
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Wikipedia - Human-computer interaction -- Academic discipline studying the relationship between computer systems and their users
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Wikipedia - Human computer
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Wikipedia - Human interface device -- Computer device that takes input from humans and gives output to humans
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Wikipedia - Humdinger (computer) -- 8-bit computer introduced in 1983
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Wikipedia - Hybrid computer
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Wikipedia - Hymn (software) -- Computer software
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Wikipedia - HyperCard -- Hypermedia system for Apple Macintosh and Apple IIGS computers
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Wikipedia - Hypercomputer
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Wikipedia - Hypot -- Computationally safe computer function to calculate the hypotenuse of a right triangle
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Wikipedia - Iamus (computer)
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Wikipedia - Ian Clarke (computer scientist) -- Irish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ian McPhee (computer scientist) -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ian Munro (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Ian Murdock -- American computer scientist, open source developer, entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Ian Sommerville (technician) -- British electronics technician and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - IAS machine -- First electronic computer to be built at the Institute for Advanced Study
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Wikipedia - IBM 1130 -- 16-bit IBM minicomputer introduced in 1965
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Wikipedia - IBM 1132 -- Line printer, part of the IBM 1130 computer system
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Wikipedia - IBM 1620 -- IBM scientific computer released in 1959
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Wikipedia - IBM 305 RAMAC -- IBM computer released in 1956, notable as first commercially available computer system to include a hard disk drive
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Wikipedia - IBM 308X -- Series of IBM mainframe computer models from 1980s
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Wikipedia - IBM 3090 -- Series of high-end 1980s IBM mainframe computers
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Wikipedia - IBM 610 -- Vacuum tube computer system
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Wikipedia - IBM 650 -- Vacuum tube computer system
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Wikipedia - IBM 700/7000 series -- Mainframe computer systems made by IBM through the 1950s and early 1960s
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Wikipedia - IBM 702 -- Vacuum tube computer system
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Wikipedia - IBM 7030 Stretch -- First IBM supercomputer using dedicated transistors
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Wikipedia - IBM 704 -- Vacuum tube computer system
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Wikipedia - IBM 7070 -- Decimal computer introduced by IBM in 1958
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Wikipedia - IBM 709 -- vacuum tube computer system
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Wikipedia - IBM 728 -- Magnetic tape drive used on the SAGE AN/FSQ-7 computer
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Wikipedia - IBM 7302 -- Computer storage unit
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Wikipedia - IBM 7950 Harvest -- Cryptanalysis computer
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Wikipedia - IBM 801 -- Experimental minicomputer by IBM
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Wikipedia - IBM Advanced/36 -- midrange computer
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Wikipedia - IBM Aptiva -- Line of personal computers developed and commercialized by IBM
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Wikipedia - IBM eFUSE -- Technology to reprogram computer chips.
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Wikipedia - IBML -- American computer software company
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Wikipedia - IBM mainframe -- Large computer systems produced by IBM since 1952
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Wikipedia - IBM PC compatible -- Computers similar to the IBM PC and its derivatives
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Wikipedia - IBM Personal Computer AT
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Wikipedia - IBM Personal Computer/AT
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Wikipedia - IBM Personal Computer -- Personal computer model released in 1981
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Wikipedia - IBM Personal Computer XT
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Wikipedia - IBM Personal System/2 -- Third generation of personal computers by IBM
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Wikipedia - IBM Portable Personal Computer
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Wikipedia - IBM PS/1 -- IBM home computer models, 1990-1994
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Wikipedia - IBM Series/1 -- 1970s era IBM minicomputer
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Wikipedia - IBM Shoebox -- 1961 speech recognition computer
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Wikipedia - IBM System/32 -- Type of mini computer
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Wikipedia - IBM System/360 Model 195 -- Discontinued mainframe computer system
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Wikipedia - IBM System/360 -- Mainframe computer system family delivered between 1965 and 1978
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Wikipedia - IBM System/370 Model 168 -- Discontinued mainframe computer system
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Wikipedia - IBM System/370 -- Family of mainframe computers 1970-1990
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Wikipedia - IBM System/390 -- Line of mainframe computers
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Wikipedia - IBM System z9 -- Line of mainframe computers
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Wikipedia - IBM ThinkPad Butterfly keyboard -- Foldout laptop computer keyboard
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Wikipedia - IBM Z -- Family name used by IBM for its non-POWER mainframe computers from the Z900 on
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Wikipedia - IBook -- Series of laptops by Apple Computer
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Wikipedia - Ice Age: Collision Course -- 2016 American computer-animated science-fiction comedy film
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Wikipedia - Identifier (computer languages)
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Wikipedia - IEEE Computer Pioneer Award
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Wikipedia - IEEE Computer Society Press
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Wikipedia - IEEE Computer Society
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Wikipedia - IEEE Computer
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Wikipedia - IEEE Koji Kobayashi Computers and Communications Award
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Wikipedia - IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science
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Wikipedia - IEEE Symposium on Logic in Computer Science
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Wikipedia - IEEE Transactions on Computers
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Wikipedia - IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
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Wikipedia - IEEE Xplore -- Research database focused on computer science, electrical engineering, electronics, and allied fields
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Wikipedia - IJCAI Computers and Thought Award
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Wikipedia - Ike Nassi -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ileana Streinu -- Romanian-American computer scientist and mathematician
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Wikipedia - Ilkay Altintas -- Turkish-American data and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - ILLIAC IV -- First massively parallel computer
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Wikipedia - ILLIAC I -- Vacuum tube computer built in 1952 by the University of Illinois
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Wikipedia - ILLIAC -- Series of supercomputers built between 1951 and 1974
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Wikipedia - Illustris project -- Computer-simulated universes
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Wikipedia - ILOVEYOU -- Computer worm
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Wikipedia - IMac G3 -- An all-in-one personal computer by Apple Inc.
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Wikipedia - IMac G4 -- All-in-one personal computer designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Computer, Inc.
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Wikipedia - IMac (Intel-based) -- Line of all-in-one desktop computers by Apple Inc.
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Wikipedia - IMac Pro -- All-in-one desktop computer designed and built by Apple Inc.
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Wikipedia - IMac -- Line of all-in-one desktop computers by Apple Inc.
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Wikipedia - Immediate mode (computer graphics)
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Wikipedia - IMPACT (computer graphics)
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Wikipedia - Include directive -- Type of file in computer programming
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Wikipedia - Incredibles 2 -- 2018 American computer-animated superhero film
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Wikipedia - Indian Computer Emergency Response Team
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Wikipedia - Indicator of compromise -- Artifact observed on a network or in an operating system that indicates a computer intrusion
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Wikipedia - Individual Computers Catweasel
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Wikipedia - Individual Computers
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Wikipedia - Industrial computed tomography -- Computer-aided tomographic process
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Wikipedia - InfiniBand -- High-speed, low-latency computer networking bus used in supercomputing
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Wikipedia - Infinite Flight -- 2011 flight simulator computer program
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Wikipedia - Influence of the IBM PC on the personal computer market
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Wikipedia - Informatics -- Concept in computer science
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Wikipedia - Information and Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Information and computer science
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Wikipedia - Information technology -- Computer-based technology
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Wikipedia - Ingo Wegener -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ingrid Verbauwhede -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Inheritance (computer science)
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Wikipedia - INK (operating system) -- Operating system that runs on the input output nodes of the IBM Blue Gene supercomputer
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Wikipedia - Input (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Insert key -- Computer keyboard key
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Wikipedia - Installation (computer programs) -- Act of making a computer program ready for execution
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Wikipedia - Instance (computer science) -- Concrete manifestation of an object (class) in software development
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Wikipedia - Instart -- Defunct American multinational computer technology corporation
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Wikipedia - Institute for Theoretical Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Institute of Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Institution (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Instruction (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Instruction set architecture -- Set of abstract symbols which describe a computer program's operations to a processor
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Wikipedia - Instrumentation (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Integer BASIC -- BASIC interpreter of the Apple I and original Apple II computers
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Wikipedia - Integer (computer science) -- Datum of integral data type
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Wikipedia - Integrated Computer Aided Manufacturing
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Wikipedia - Integrated Computer-Aided Manufacturing
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Wikipedia - Interactive computer graphics
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Wikipedia - Interactive kiosk -- Computer terminal that provides access to information, communication, commerce, etc.
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Wikipedia - Interface (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Interface (computing) -- Concept of computer science; point of interaction between two things
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Wikipedia - Intergalactic Computer Network
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Wikipedia - Interleaved memory -- Computer memory access architecture
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Wikipedia - International Computer Music Association
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Wikipedia - International Computers and Tabulators
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Wikipedia - International Computer Science Institute
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Wikipedia - International Computers Limited -- British computer company (1968-2002)
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Wikipedia - International Conference on Computer-Aided Design
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Wikipedia - International Conference on Computer Communications
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Wikipedia - International Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques
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Wikipedia - International Conference on Computer Vision
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Wikipedia - International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks -- Computer networking conference
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Wikipedia - International Journal of Advanced Computer Technology -- Journal
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Wikipedia - International Journal of Computer Vision
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Wikipedia - International Journal of Foundations of Computer Science
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Wikipedia - International Obfuscated C Code Contest -- Computer programming contest
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Wikipedia - International Paderborn Computer Chess Championship
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Wikipedia - International Symposium on Computer Architecture
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Wikipedia - Internet culture -- Culture that has emerged from the use of computer networks
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Wikipedia - Internet Protocol television -- Television transmitted over a computer network
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Wikipedia - Internet Protocol -- Communication protocol that establishes the Internet across computer network boundaries
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Wikipedia - Internet security -- Branch of computer security specifically related to Internet, often involving browser security and the World Wide Web
|
Wikipedia - Internet -- Global system of connected computer networks
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Wikipedia - Interpreter (computer software)
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Wikipedia - Interpreter directive -- Computer language construct to control an interpreter
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Wikipedia - Interprocedural optimization -- Computer program optimization method
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Wikipedia - Introspection (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Invariant (computer science)
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Wikipedia - IPad (1st generation) -- The line of tablet computers designed by Apple, Inc.
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Wikipedia - IPad (2017) -- Mid-range tablet computer produced by Apple
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Wikipedia - IPad (2018) -- Tablet computer developed and marketed by Apple Inc.
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Wikipedia - IPad (2019) -- Tablet computer developed and marketed by Apple Inc.
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Wikipedia - IPad (2020) -- Tablet computer developed and marketed by Apple Inc.
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Wikipedia - IPad (3rd generation) -- Series of tablet computers
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Wikipedia - IPad Air 2 -- Series of tablet computers
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Wikipedia - IP address management -- Methodology implemented in computer software for planning and managing assignment and use of IP addresses and closely related resources of a computer network
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Wikipedia - IPad Mini -- Line of mini tablet computers from Apple Inc
|
Wikipedia - IPad Pro -- Line of iPad tablet computers by Apple Inc.
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Wikipedia - IPad -- Line of tablet computers by Apple
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Wikipedia - IPv6 address -- Label to identify a network interface of a computer or other network node
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Wikipedia - Irene Greif -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Irma Wyman -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Iryna Gurevych -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - IS-IS -- Computer network routing protocol
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Wikipedia - ISmell -- Computer accessory
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Wikipedia - ISO/IEEE 11073 -- Standard on communication between medical devices and external computer systems
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Wikipedia - Itsy Pocket Computer
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Wikipedia - Ivan Bratko (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - IWoz: Computer Geek to Cult Icon: How I Invented the Personal Computer, Co-Founded Apple, and Had Fun Doing It
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Wikipedia - IWoz: From Computer Geek to Cult Icon: How I Invented the Personal Computer, Co-Founded Apple, and Had Fun Doing It
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Wikipedia - Ixia (company) -- US computer networking company
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Wikipedia - Jacek Karpinski -- Polish computer scientist (1927-2010)
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Wikipedia - Jack Dorsey -- American internet computer software executive and CEO of Twitter and Square
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Wikipedia - Jack Edmonds -- American/Canadian mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jacob Abraham -- American computer scientist and engineer
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Wikipedia - Jacob Appelbaum -- American computer security researcher and journalist (born 1 April 1983)
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Wikipedia - Jacques Cohen (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Jacques Vallee -- Computer scientist, ufologist
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Wikipedia - Jade Wang -- American computer programmer and neuroscientist
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Wikipedia - Jaggies -- Computer graphics effect
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Wikipedia - Jaguar (supercomputer)
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Wikipedia - Jaguar supercomputer
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Wikipedia - Jaime Carbonell -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jakers! The Adventures of Piggley Winks -- Irish computer-animated children's television series
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Wikipedia - J. Alan George -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - James Alty -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - James Clavell's ShM-EM-^Mgun -- 1989 interactive fiction computer game
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Wikipedia - James Cordy -- Canadian computer scientist and educator
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Wikipedia - James Dolan (computer security expert) -- American computer security expert, co-developed SecureDrop
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Wikipedia - James D. Sachs -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - James Gosling -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - James H. Davenport -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - James Mickens -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - James P. Clements -- American computer scientist and academic administrator
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Wikipedia - Jamila Abbas -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jana KoM-EM-!ecka -- Slovak computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jane Grimson -- Computer engineer
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Wikipedia - JANET -- Academic computer network in the United Kingdom
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Wikipedia - Jan Friso Groote -- Dutch computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Janice E. Cuny -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Janice Lourie -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jan Peters (computer scientist) -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jan Verelst (scientist) -- Belgian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jan Wielemaker -- Dutch computer scientist and professor
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Wikipedia - Jan WM-DM-^Yglarz -- Polish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Japanese input method -- Methods used to input Japanese characters on a computer
|
Wikipedia - Jarkko Oikarinen -- Finnish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jaron Lanier -- American computer scientist, musician, and author
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Wikipedia - Jason Spisak -- American voice actor and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - JAWS (screen reader) -- Computer screen reader software
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Wikipedia - Jayme Luiz Szwarcfiter -- Brazilian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - J. C. R. Licklider -- American psychologist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jean Bacon -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jean Bartik -- American ENIAC computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Jean-Bernard Condat -- Computer hacker
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Wikipedia - Jean Dollimore -- English computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jean E. Sammet -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jean Gallier -- computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jean-loup Gailly -- Computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Jeanne Clare Adams -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jeanne Ferrante -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jeannette Wing -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jeanne W. Ross -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jean-Raymond Abrial -- French computer scientist and inventor
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Wikipedia - Jean Scholtz -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jeff Dean (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist and software engineer
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Wikipedia - Jeff Prosise -- Computer writer
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Wikipedia - Jeffrey Heer -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jeffrey Shallit -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jeffrey Vetter -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jeff Sutherland -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jelani Nelson -- American Computer Scientist
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Wikipedia - Jen Golbeck -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jenifer Haselgrove -- British physicist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jennifer Mankoff -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jennifer Rexford -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jennifer Seberry -- Australian cryptographer, mathematician, and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jennifer Tour Chayes -- American computer scientist and mathematician
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Wikipedia - Jennifer Widom -- University professor in Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Jenny Preece -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jenny's Journeys -- Educational Computer Game
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Wikipedia - Jeremie Miller -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Jeremy Ashkenas -- Computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Jeremy Gibbons -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jerome R. Cox, Jr. -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jeromy Carriere -- Canadian computer software engineer
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Wikipedia - Jerry L. Prince -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jerry Saltzer -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jerry Yang -- computer programmer and Founder of Yahoo!
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Wikipedia - Jerusalem (computer virus)
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Wikipedia - Jesse Vincent -- Businessperson and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Jessica Hammer -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jessica Hodgins -- American roboticist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jessica Staddon -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jetty Kleijn -- Dutch computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jiebo Luo -- Chinese-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jill Slay -- British-Australian engineer and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jill Zimmerman -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jim Brown (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Jim Davies (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Jim Ellis (computing) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jim Gettys -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Jim Gray (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Jim Hall (computer programmer) -- American programmer and FreeDOS founder
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Wikipedia - Jim Kent -- American research scientist and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius -- 2001 computer-animated film by John A. Davis
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Wikipedia - Jim Waldo -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jim Weirich -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Jim Woodcock -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jing-Pha Tsai -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jit Bose -- Canadian mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jiuzhang (quantum computer)
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Wikipedia - J. J. Stiffler -- American electrical engineer, computer scientist and entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - JJ Zhuang -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Joan Ball -- Computer dating pioneer
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Wikipedia - Joan Francioni -- American Professor of Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Joan L. Mitchell -- American computer scientist and inventor
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Wikipedia - Joanna Hoffman -- American computer developer
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Wikipedia - Joanna McGrenere -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Joanna Rutkowska -- Polish hacker and computer security expert
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Wikipedia - Jochen Liedtke -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Joe Armstrong (programmer) -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Joel McCormack -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Joel Moses -- Computer scientist (b. 1941)
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Wikipedia - Joe Stoy -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Johan HM-CM-%stad -- Swedish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - John A. Postley -- American computer software entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - John Barnes (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - John Carmack -- American computer programmer, engineer, and businessman
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Wikipedia - John Cocke -- American computer scientist and mathematician
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Wikipedia - John E. Savage -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - John F. Hughes (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - John Fitzgerald (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - John Gage -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - John Harris (software developer) -- Computer programmer, hacker and software developer
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Wikipedia - John Hughes (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - John Knoll -- American computer graphics professional
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Wikipedia - John Langford (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - John L. Hennessy -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - John Lilly (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - John Maeda -- American artist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - John Makepeace Bennett -- Australian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - John Mashey -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - John Mathieson (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - John McAfee -- American computer programmer and businessman
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Wikipedia - John McCarthy (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist and cognitive scientist
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Wikipedia - John Miller-Kirkpatrick -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - John M. Scholes (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - John Murphy (engineer) -- American inventor and computer engineer
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Wikipedia - JOHNNIAC -- Early computer built by the RAND Corporation
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Wikipedia - Johnny Long -- American computer security expert
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Wikipedia - John Pinkerton (computer designer)
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Wikipedia - John Platt (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - John R. Rice (computer scientist) -- American mathematician
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Wikipedia - John Todd (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - John Vincent Atanasoff -- American computer pioneer (1903-1995)
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Wikipedia - John von Neumann Computer Society
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Wikipedia - John Walker (journalist) -- British computer games journalist
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Wikipedia - John Warnock -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Johny Srouji -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Joint Computer Conference
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Wikipedia - JoM-CM-+lle Coutaz -- French computer scientist
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Wikipedia - JoM-CM-+lle Pineau -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jonathan Alexander (computer programmer) -- Computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Jonathan Bowen -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jonathan Katz (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Jonathan Potter (computer programmer)
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Wikipedia - Jonathan Shewchuk -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jonathan Zarra -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Jon Bentley (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jon Callas -- American computer security expert
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Wikipedia - Jon Crowcroft -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jon Hare -- English computer game designer
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Wikipedia - Joost-Pieter Katoen -- Dutch theoretical computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jordan Antiquities Database and Information System -- Computer database of antiquities in Jordan
|
Wikipedia - Joseph A. Konstan -- American professor and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Joseph Goguen -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Joseph Henry Condon -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Joseph Henry Wegstein -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Josep Torrellas -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Josh Gare -- English computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Journal of Computer and System Sciences
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Wikipedia - Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography -- Bimonthly peer-reviewed journal
|
Wikipedia - Journal of Universal Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Joy Buolamwini -- American computer scientist and digital activist
|
Wikipedia - Joyce Currie Little -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - J. Presper Eckert -- American electrical engineer and computer pioneer
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Wikipedia - J. Todd Coleman -- American computer game designer
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Wikipedia - Juan Benet (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Juan Pavon -- Spanish computer scientist (b.1962)
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Wikipedia - Judit Bar-Ilan -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Judith Donath -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Judith Gal-Ezer -- Israeli computer science professor
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Wikipedia - Judith S. Olson -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Judy Clapp -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Judy Goldsmith (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Julia Chuzhoy -- Israeli mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Julia Hirschberg -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Julia Schnabel -- Computer imaging researcher
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Wikipedia - Julie Dorsey -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Julie Zhuo -- Chinese-American businessperson and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Jump server -- A computer on a network used to access a separate security zone
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Wikipedia - Juraj HromkoviM-DM-^M -- Slovak computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Justine Cassell -- American linguist, professor and human-computer interaction researcher
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Wikipedia - Justin Frankel -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Kai Krause -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kai Paulsen -- Norwegian journalist, photographer, and computer collector
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Wikipedia - Kaisa Sere -- Finnish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kanchana Kanchanasut -- Computer scientist and Internet pioneer
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Wikipedia - Kane quantum computer
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Wikipedia - Kapali Eswaran -- Computer developer
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Wikipedia - Karen Banks -- British computer networking pioneer
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Wikipedia - Karen Devine -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Karen Holtzblatt -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Karen Petrie -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Karen SpM-CM-$rck Jones -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Karin Schnass -- Austrian mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Karrie Karahalios -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Karyn Moffat -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kasia Glowicka -- Polish computer music composer (born 1977)
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Wikipedia - Kate Devlin -- British computer scientist, AI specialist
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Wikipedia - Kate Keahey -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kateryna Yushchenko (scientist) -- Ukrainian Soviet and Ukrainian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Katherine St. John -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Katherine Yelick -- American computer scientist and academic
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Wikipedia - Kathleen Antonelli -- Irish-American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Kathleen Booth -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kathleen Fisher -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kathleen McKeown -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kathleen Nichols -- American computer scientist and computer networking researcher
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Wikipedia - Kathrin Klamroth -- German mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kathryn Leonard -- American mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kathryn S. McKinley -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Katia Sycara -- Greek-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Katie Bouman -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Katie Moussouris -- American computer security researcher, entrepreneur, and pioneer in vulnerability disclosure
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Wikipedia - Katja Hose -- Danish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Katrina Ligett -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kavita Bala -- Indian computer scientist and academic
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Wikipedia - K Computer Mae Station -- Railway station in Kobe, Japan
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Wikipedia - K computer -- Supercomputer in Kobe, Japan
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Wikipedia - KeePass -- Computer password management utility
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Wikipedia - Kees van Hee -- Dutch computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Keith Clark (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Kelton Flinn -- American computer game designer
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Wikipedia - Ken Arnold -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Ken Hinckley -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ken Kennedy (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Kenneth A De Jong -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kenneth Bowles -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kenneth L. Clarkson -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ken Olsen -- American computer engineer and businessman
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Wikipedia - Ken Schwaber -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ken Thompson (computer programmer)
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Wikipedia - Ken Thompson -- American computer scientist, creator of the Unix operating system
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Wikipedia - Kerberos (protocol) -- Computer authentication protocol
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Wikipedia - Kernel (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Kernel (operating system) -- Core of a computer operating system
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Wikipedia - Kerrie Holley -- American research computer scientist (born 1954)
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Wikipedia - Kevin Lano -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kevin Mitnick -- American computer security consultant, author, convicted criminal, and hacker
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Wikipedia - Kevin Scott (computer scientist) -- Chief Technology Officer at Microsoft
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Wikipedia - Keyboard layout -- Any specific physical, visual, or functional arrangement of the keys of a computer keyboard
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Wikipedia - Keyword (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Killer Bean Forever -- 2009 American computer-animated action film by Jeff Lew
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Wikipedia - Kimber Lockhart -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kimberly Keeton -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kim Binsted -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kim Cameron (computer scientist) -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kim Rees -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kingston Technology -- American multinational computer technology company
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Wikipedia - King-Sun Fu -- computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kira Radinsky -- Israelien computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kit Clayton -- American musician and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Kiwi! -- 2006 computer-generated animation
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Wikipedia - Klaus Pohl (computer scientist) -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - K. Mani Chandy -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Knowledge-based systems -- Computer program that reasons and uses a knowledge base to solve complex problems
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Wikipedia - KoalaPad -- 1980s computer graphics tablet
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Wikipedia - Kobbi Nissim -- computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kohsuke Kawaguchi -- Jenkins creator and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Konrad Berkowicz -- Polish politician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Konrad Zuse -- 20th-century German computer scientist and engineer
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Wikipedia - Kori Inkpen -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Krishnendu Chatterjee -- Indian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kristen Grauman -- Computer vision and machine learning researcher
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Wikipedia - Kristen Nygaard -- Computer scientist, mathematician
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Wikipedia - Kristian Kersting -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kristina Hook -- Swedish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kronos (computer)
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Wikipedia - Kunihiko Fukushima -- Japanese computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kurt Akeley -- American computer graphics engineer
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Wikipedia - Kurt Jensen (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - KVM switch -- Device that connects computer front-end hardware to multiple computers
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Wikipedia - Kwan-Liu Ma -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Kyle Milliken -- American computer hacker and security consultant
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Wikipedia - Label (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Laboratory for Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Laboratory for Foundations of Computer Science
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Wikipedia - LaFarr Stuart -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - LA Law: The Computer Game -- 1992 video game
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Wikipedia - Lale Akarun -- Turkish electrical engineer and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Lamport timestamp -- Algorithm used to determine the order of events in a distributed computer system
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Wikipedia - LAN gaming center -- local area network for playing multiplayer computer games
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Wikipedia - Language Acquisition Device (computer)
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Wikipedia - Language and Computers
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Wikipedia - Language Computer Corporation -- Research company
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Wikipedia - Language (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Lanix -- Mexican computer and phone manufacturer
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Wikipedia - Laptop computers
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Wikipedia - Laptop computer
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Wikipedia - Laptop -- Personal computer for mobile use
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Wikipedia - Larry Ewing -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Larry Harris (computer scientist) -- American AI researcher and businessman
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Wikipedia - Larry McVoy -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Larry Page -- American computer scientist and Internet entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Larry Tesler -- American computer scientist (1945-2020)
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Wikipedia - Larry Wall -- American computer programmer and author
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Wikipedia - Lars Arge -- Danish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Lars Bak (computer programmer) -- Danish computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Laser Hawk -- 1986 video game for Atari 8-bit computers
|
Wikipedia - Latanya Sweeney -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Launch Vehicle Digital Computer -- Computer of the Saturn V rocket
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Wikipedia - Laura M. Haas -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Laura Waller -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Lauren McCarthy -- American artist and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Laurie Hendren -- Canadian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lawrence J. Fogel -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lawrence M. Breed -- Computer scientist and early Burning Man contributor
|
Wikipedia - Lawrence Paulson -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Lazy loading -- Design pattern in computer programming
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Wikipedia - LCFG -- Computer configuration management system
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Wikipedia - Leaf subroutine -- Subroutines in computer science
|
Wikipedia - Leah Culver -- American computer scientist and entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Leah Findlater -- Canadian/American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Lecture Notes in Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Lee Felsenstein -- American computer engineer
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Wikipedia - Legacy-free PC -- Type of personal computer
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Wikipedia - Legionnaire (video game) -- Real-time tactics strategy computer game from 1982 for Atari computers
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Wikipedia - Leila De Floriani -- Italian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Leila Takayama -- Human-computer interaction specialist
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Wikipedia - Lemuel Davis -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Lenore Blum -- American computer scientist and mathematician
|
Wikipedia - Lenore Cowen -- American mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - LEO (computer)
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Wikipedia - LEO computer
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Wikipedia - Leonard Adleman -- American theoretical computer scientist and professor of computer science and molecular biology at the University of Southern California
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Wikipedia - Leonard Shapiro -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Leonid Rudin -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Leon Shklar -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Leslie Benzies -- Scottish computer programmer and businessman
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Wikipedia - Leslie Lamport -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Leszek A. GM-DM-^Esieniec -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Level (computer and video games)
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Wikipedia - Level of detail (computer graphics) -- Adjusting the complexity of a 3D model representation to save storage and computation
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Wikipedia - Levenshtein distance -- Computer science metric for string similarity
|
Wikipedia - Lexical analysis -- Conversion of character sequences into token sequences in computer science
|
Wikipedia - Leysia Palen -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - LG G Pad 7.0 -- Android-based tablet computer produced and marketed by LG Electronics
|
Wikipedia - LG G Pad 8.0 -- Android-based tablet computer produced and marketed by LG Electronics
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Wikipedia - Liang-Jie Zhang -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Library (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Library (computing) -- Collection of non-volatile resources used by computer programs, often for software development.
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Wikipedia - Libratus -- Artificial intelligence poker playing computer program
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Wikipedia - LibreCAD -- Computer-aided design software
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Wikipedia - Librem -- Computer line by Purism featuring free software
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Wikipedia - Li-Chen Wang -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Li Fan (engineer) -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Light pen -- Computer input device
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Wikipedia - Lightweight Directory Access Protocol -- Computer network protocol
|
Wikipedia - Light-weight process -- A means of achieving computer multitasking
|
Wikipedia - Li Gong (computer scientist)
|
Wikipedia - Li Guojie (computer scientist) -- Chinese computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lila Kari -- Romanian and Canadian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lili Qiu -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Lilith (computer)
|
Wikipedia - Lillian Lee (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Lilya Budaghyan -- Armenian cryptographer, computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Linda Pagli -- Italian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Link-local address -- Computer network address that is only usable on the same local network
|
Wikipedia - Lisa Anthony -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lisa (computer chip)
|
Wikipedia - Lisa Gelobter -- Computer scientist, technologist and chief executive
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Wikipedia - Lise Getoor -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - List (abstract data type) -- Abstract data type used in computer science
|
Wikipedia - List (computer science)
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Wikipedia - List of 3D computer graphics software -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of academic computer science departments -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of British computers -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of common resolutions -- Computer/TV screen specifications
|
Wikipedia - List of computer algebra systems -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer-animated films -- Wikimedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer-animated television series -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer-assisted organic synthesis software -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer books -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer criminals -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer graphics and descriptive geometry topics -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer hardware manufacturers in the Soviet Union -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer hardware manufacturers -- Wikimedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer magazines in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer magazines -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer museums -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer occupations -- Wikimedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer pioneers
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Wikipedia - List of computer-related awards -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer science awards -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer science conference acronyms -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer science conferences -- Wikimedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer science journals -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer scientists -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer security certifications
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Wikipedia - List of computer simulation software -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer size categories -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computers running CP/M -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer standards -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of Computers With On-Board BASIC
|
Wikipedia - List of computers with on-board BASIC -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer system emulators -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer system manufacturers -- Wikimedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of computer systems from Croatia -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer systems from Serbia -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer systems from Slovenia -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer systems from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer technology code names -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer term etymologies -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of computer worms -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of convertible tablet computer brands -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of convicted computer criminals
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Wikipedia - List of countries by computer exports -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of early microcomputers -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of Enix home computer games -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of Family Computer Disk System games -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of Family Computer games -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of fastest computers -- Wikimedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of fictional computers -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of films about computers -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of Fortune 500 computer software and information companies -- Wikimedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of home computers by video hardware -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of home computers -- Wikimedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of human-computer interaction topics
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Wikipedia - List of important publications in computer science -- Wikimedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of important publications in theoretical computer science -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of Indian computer scientists
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Wikipedia - List of Jewish American computer scientists -- List
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Wikipedia - List of Linux-supported computer architectures
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Wikipedia - List of members of the National Academy of Engineering (Computer science)
|
Wikipedia - List of members of the National Academy of Sciences (Computer and information sciences)
|
Wikipedia - List of members of the National Academy of Sciences (computer and information sciences)
|
Wikipedia - List of MT-32-compatible computer games -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of open problems in computer science
|
Wikipedia - List of pioneers in computer science -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of presidents of the British Computer Society -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of Slovenian computer scientists -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of Soviet computer systems -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of text-based computer games -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of transistorized computers -- Wikimedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of TRS-80 and Tandy-branded computers -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of unsolved problems in computer science -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - List of vacuum tube computers -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of VAX computers -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - Lists of computers -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - Lists of microcomputers -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - Lists of mobile computers -- Wikipedia list article
|
Wikipedia - Literal (computer programming) -- Notation for representing a fixed value in source code
|
Wikipedia - Literal (computer science)
|
Wikipedia - Little Computer 3
|
Wikipedia - Little man computer
|
Wikipedia - Liuba Shrira -- Computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Liu Jiren -- Chinese computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Liu Zhiming (computer scientist)
|
Wikipedia - Living Computer Museum
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Wikipedia - Living Computers: Museum + Labs
|
Wikipedia - Li Wei (computer scientist)
|
Wikipedia - Lixia Zhang -- Professor of Computer Science
|
Wikipedia - Liz Bacon -- Professor of computer science
|
Wikipedia - Liz Liddy -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Local area network -- Computer network that connects devices over a limited area
|
Wikipedia - Locale (computer hardware)
|
Wikipedia - Locale (computer software) -- Standard UNIX utility
|
Wikipedia - Location-based service -- General class of computer program-level services that use location data to control features
|
Wikipedia - Lock (computer science)
|
Wikipedia - Lock screen -- Computer user interface element
|
Wikipedia - Log file -- Chronological record of computer data processing operations
|
Wikipedia - Logical Methods in Computer Science
|
Wikipedia - Logic in computer science -- Academic discipline
|
Wikipedia - Logic Theorist -- 1956 computer program written by Allen Newell, Herbert A. Simon and Cliff Shaw
|
Wikipedia - Login -- process by which individual access to a computer system is controlled by identifying and authenticating the user through the credentials presented by the user
|
Wikipedia - Logo (programming language) -- Computer programming language
|
Wikipedia - Log rotation -- Aspect of computer systems management
|
Wikipedia - Lois Haibt -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lora Aroyo -- Dutch computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Loren Carpenter -- American computer graphics researcher
|
Wikipedia - Lori A. Clarke -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lori L. Pollock -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lorinda Cherry -- Computer scientist and original Unix team member
|
Wikipedia - Lorraine Borman -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Loss-DiVincenzo quantum computer
|
Wikipedia - Lotfi A. Zadeh -- Electrical engineer and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Louiqa Raschid -- Sri Lankan computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lourdes Agapito -- Professor and researcher in computer 3D-vision
|
Wikipedia - Love Thru the Computer -- 2019 single by Gucci Mane featuring Justin Bieber
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Wikipedia - Lov Grover -- Indian-American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lowest common denominator (computers)
|
Wikipedia - LPDDR -- Computer hardware
|
Wikipedia - Lsh -- Remote shell services or command execution for secure network services between two networked computers
|
Wikipedia - Lucas Cruz -- Spanish computer engineer
|
Wikipedia - Luck (2022 film) -- Upcoming American computer-animated comedy film
|
Wikipedia - Lucy Gilbert -- American computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Ludvig Strigeus -- Swedish computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Luis Villa -- American computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Luis von Ahn -- Guatemalan entrepreneur and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lydia Kavraki -- Greek computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Lynn Abbey -- American computer programmer and author
|
Wikipedia - Lynn Conway -- American computer scientist and electrical engineer
|
Wikipedia - M4 (computer language)
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Wikipedia - Mabel Addis -- First woman computer games designer
|
Wikipedia - MacBook (2006-2012) -- Line of notebook computers by Apple
|
Wikipedia - MacBook (2015-2019) -- Discontinued line of portable Apple computers
|
Wikipedia - MacBook -- Lines of Apple laptop computers
|
Wikipedia - MACD operations -- Computer network terminology
|
Wikipedia - Machine code -- Set of instructions executed directly by a computer's central processing unit (CPU)
|
Wikipedia - Machine learning -- Scientific study of algorithms and statistical models that computer systems use to perform tasks without explicit instructions
|
Wikipedia - Machine-readable dictionary -- Dictionary stored as machine (computer) data
|
Wikipedia - Machinima -- Use of real-time computer graphics engines to create a cinematic production
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh Classic -- Brand of personal computers
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh computers
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh IIfx -- Personal computer by Apple
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh IIvi -- Personal computer by Apple
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh IIvx -- Personal computer by Apple
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh LC -- Personal computer by Apple
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh Office -- Apple's effort to bring Macintosh computers into business environments
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh operating systems -- Family of operating systems for Macintosh computers
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh Performa -- Family of personal computers by Apple
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh Portable -- First battery-powered portable computer by Apple
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh startup -- Startup sequence for Macintosh computers
|
Wikipedia - Macintosh -- Family of personal computers designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Inc.
|
Wikipedia - Mac Mini -- Desktop computer by Apple
|
Wikipedia - Mac Pro -- Line of workstation and server computers for professionals
|
Wikipedia - Macro (computer science) -- In computer science, a concise representation of a pattern
|
Wikipedia - Macro virus -- Computer virus written in a macro language
|
Wikipedia - Mac transition to Intel processors -- 2005-2006 transition of Apple Inc.'s Mac computers from PowerPC to Intel x86 processors
|
Wikipedia - Macworld -- Web site and monthly computer magazine dedicated to products and software from Apple
|
Wikipedia - Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa -- 2008 American computer-animated comedy film
|
Wikipedia - Madagascar (franchise) -- Computer-animated media franchise produced by DreamWorks Animation
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Wikipedia - Mads Tofte -- Danish computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Magdalena Balazinska -- Computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Magdolna Zimanyi -- Hungarian mathematician, computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Magerit -- Supercomputer in Madrid, Spain
|
Wikipedia - Maggie Cheng -- Applied mathematician, computer scientist, and network scientist
|
Wikipedia - Magic Mouse 2 -- Computer mouse developed and released by Apple Inc.
|
Wikipedia - Magic: The Gathering (1997 video game) -- Computer game published by MicroProse
|
Wikipedia - Magma (computer algebra system)
|
Wikipedia - Magnetic-core memory -- A type of computer memory used from 1955 to 1975
|
Wikipedia - Magnetoresistive RAM -- Novel type of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Magnuson Computer Systems
|
Wikipedia - Mahsa Mohaghegh -- Iranian-born New Zealand computer engineer
|
Wikipedia - Mahta Moghaddam -- Iranian-American electrical and computer engineer
|
Wikipedia - Mainframe computers
|
Wikipedia - Mainframe computer -- Computers used primarily by large organizations for business-critical applications
|
Wikipedia - Mainframe Studios -- Canadian computer animation company
|
Wikipedia - Maja Mataric -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Maksim Yakubets -- Ukrainian national and a computer expert
|
Wikipedia - Malaysian National Computer Confederation
|
Wikipedia - Manchester Baby -- First electronic stored-program computer, 1948
|
Wikipedia - Manchester computers -- Series of stored-program electronic computers
|
Wikipedia - Manchester Electronic Computer
|
Wikipedia - Manchester Mark 1 -- English stored-program computer, 1949
|
Wikipedia - Man-Computer Symbiosis
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Wikipedia - Mandy Chessell -- British computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - MANIAC I -- Early computer
|
Wikipedia - Manik Varma (computer scientist) -- An Indian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Manila Christian Computer Institute for the Deaf -- Christian Institute for the Deaf
|
Wikipedia - Manny Lehman (computer scientist) -- Known for Lehman's laws of software evolution
|
Wikipedia - Manuela M. Veloso -- Portuguese-American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Manuel Blum -- Venezuelan computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Map (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Maple computer algebra system
|
Wikipedia - Marc Auslander -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marcel Kolaja -- Czech computer specialist, activist and politician
|
Wikipedia - Marching cubes -- Computer graphics algorithm
|
Wikipedia - Margaret Burnett -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Margaret Helen Harper -- American computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Margaret H. Wright -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Margaret Marrs -- English computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Margaret Martonosi -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Margaret Ross (academic) -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Margarita Chli -- Greek computer vision and robotics researcher
|
Wikipedia - Margo Seltzer -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Maria-Florina Balcan -- Romanian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Maria Klawe -- Canadian-American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Maria L. Gini -- Italian and American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Mariangiola Dezani-Ciancaglini -- Italian logician and theoretical computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marian Petre -- British computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Maria Orlowska -- Polish computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Maria von Wedemeyer -- German theologian and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marie-Claude Gaudel -- French mathematician and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marie desJardins -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marie-Francine Moens -- Belgian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marie-Paule Cani -- French computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marilyn Tremaine -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marjorie Devaney -- American mathematician, electrical engineer, and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Mark Braverman (mathematician) -- Israeli mathematician and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Mark Canepa -- American computer technology executive
|
Wikipedia - Mark Dean (computer scientist)
|
Wikipedia - Mark Delany -- Australian computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Mark d'Inverno -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mark Handley (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Mark Harman (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Mark Harris (programmer) -- American computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Mark Kilgard -- American computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Mark Kryder -- American computer engineer
|
Wikipedia - Marko Calasan -- Macedonian computer systems prodigy
|
Wikipedia - Mark Overmars -- Dutch computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Mark Pilgrim -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Mark Randel -- American computer game designer
|
Wikipedia - Mark Spencer (computer engineer) -- Computer engineer
|
Wikipedia - Marlene Hazle -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marsha Berger -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marshalling (computer science)
|
Wikipedia - Marshall Kirk McKusick -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Martha E. Pollack -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Martha Evens -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Martha Palmer -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Marti Hearst -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Martine Kempf -- French computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Martin L. Kersten -- Dutch computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Martin Newell (computer scientist)
|
Wikipedia - Martin Richards (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Martin Roesch -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Marvin Stein (computer scientist) -- Jewish American mathematician
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Wikipedia - Mary Allen Wilkes -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Mary Ann Horton -- American computer scientist and Usenet pioneer (born 1955)
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Wikipedia - Mary Beth Rosson -- Computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Mary Edwards (human computer) -- British mathematician and astronomer
|
Wikipedia - Mary Fernandez -- American computer scientist and activist
|
Wikipedia - Mary Gardiner -- Australian computer scientist and activist
|
Wikipedia - Mary Jane Irwin -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mary Jean Harrold -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mary Kenneth Keller -- First American woman to receive a PhD in computer science
|
Wikipedia - Mary K. Hawes -- Computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Mary Lee Woods -- British mathematician and computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Mary Lou Soffa -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Mary Shaw (computer scientist) -- American software engineer
|
Wikipedia - Masaru Kitsuregawa -- Japanese computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Massachusetts Computer Associates
|
Wikipedia - Master of Computer Applications
|
Wikipedia - Matchbox Educable Noughts and Crosses Engine -- Analogue computer made of matchboxes
|
Wikipedia - Mateo Valero -- Spanish computer architect (born 1952)
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Wikipedia - Mathematical Foundations of Computer Science
|
Wikipedia - Mathew Bevan -- British computer hacker
|
Wikipedia - Mathias Payer -- Liechtensteinian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - MATHLAB -- Computer algebra system
|
Wikipedia - Matt Dillon (computer scientist)
|
Wikipedia - Matthew Dillon (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Matthew Garrett -- Irish computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Matthew Hackett -- American computer graphics animator
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Wikipedia - Matthew K. Franklin -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Matt Kaufmann -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Matt Welsh (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Maureen C. Stone -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Maurice Herlihy -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Maurice Karnaugh -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Maurice Wilkes -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Maxime Crochemore -- French computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Maxine D. Brown -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Max Mathews -- American pioneer in computer music
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Wikipedia - Max Planck Institute for Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Maya Ackerman -- Russian-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - McAfee -- American global computer security software company
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Wikipedia - McGill University School of Computer Science
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Wikipedia - M-CM-^]mir Vigfusson -- Icelandic computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Mechanical computer -- Computer built from mechanical components such as levers and gears
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Wikipedia - Medical calculator -- Computer software for health indices
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Wikipedia - Megamind -- 2010 American 3D computer-animated superhero comedy film directed by Miles Leonard
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Wikipedia - Megan Squire -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mei Hong (computer scientist) -- Chinese computer scientist (born1963)
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Wikipedia - Melanie Rieback -- Dutch-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mellanox Technologies -- Israeli-American multinational supplier of computer networking products
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Wikipedia - Mellon optical memory -- Early type of computer memory
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Wikipedia - Memcached -- Software that caches strings in computer memory, often used for web sites
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Wikipedia - Memory architecture -- Methods used to implement electronic computer data storage
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Wikipedia - Memory bank -- Logical unit of storage in computer architecture
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Wikipedia - Memory (computers)
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Wikipedia - Memory-hard function -- Computer algorithm that requires a lot of memory
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Wikipedia - Memory leak -- Computer science term
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Wikipedia - Memory management -- Computer memory management methodology
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Wikipedia - Mentec PDP-11 -- Computer company focused on DEC's PDP-11
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Wikipedia - Menu (computing) -- List of options or commands within a computer program
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Wikipedia - Mephisto (chess computer)
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Wikipedia - Meral M-CM-^Vzsoyoglu -- Turkish-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Meredith Ringel Morris -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Merope (supercomputer) -- NASA supercomputer
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Wikipedia - Mesa (computer graphics) -- Free and open-source library for 3D graphics rendering
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Wikipedia - Mesh Computers -- Private computer company
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Wikipedia - Mesh networking -- Computer networking using a mesh topology
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Wikipedia - Message (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Message passing in computer clusters
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Wikipedia - Message Passing Interface -- Message-passing system for parallel computers
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Wikipedia - Metacharacter -- Character that has a special meaning to a computer program
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Wikipedia - Metadata controller -- Computer data storage technology
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Wikipedia - Meta-learning (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Meta learning (computer science) -- Subfield of machine learning
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Wikipedia - Metaphor Computer Systems
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Wikipedia - Metasploit Project -- Computer security testing tool
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Wikipedia - Method (computer programming) -- Computer function or subroutine that is tied to a particular instance or class
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Wikipedia - Method (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Metropolitan area network -- Computer network serving a populated area
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Wikipedia - Michael A. Jackson -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Backes -- German professor of computer science
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Wikipedia - Michael Butler (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Michael Deering -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Franz -- |American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Genesereth -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Goldsmith (computer scientist) -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Gregg -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Guy (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Michael Guy -- British mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Heath (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Michael J. Black -- American-born computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael J. C. Gordon -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael J. Freedman -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Kearns (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael L. Littman -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Osinski -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Michael Overton -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael P. Barnett -- British theoretical chemist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Sperberg-McQueen -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Michael Spivey -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Stonebraker -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michael Tomczyk -- American businessman and home computer pioneer
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Wikipedia - Michal Feldman -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michal Irani -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michal Parnas -- Israeli theoretical computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michela Taufer -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Michele Sebag -- French computer scientist
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Wikipedia - MicroBee -- Series of networkable home computers
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Wikipedia - Microcomputer revolution
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Wikipedia - Microcomputers
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Wikipedia - Microcomputer -- A small computer, with a processor made of one or a few integrated circuits
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Wikipedia - Microcontroller -- Small computer on a single integrated circuit
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Wikipedia - Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation
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Wikipedia - Microprocessor -- Computer processor contained on an integrated-circuit chip
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Wikipedia - Microservices -- A collection of loosely coupled services used to build computer applications
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Wikipedia - Microsoft Adventure -- 1979 computer game
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Wikipedia - Microsoft BackOffice Server -- Computer software package
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Wikipedia - Microsoft Baseline Security Analyzer -- Computer security evaluation tool
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Wikipedia - Microsoft Endpoint Manager -- Cloud based computer software
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Wikipedia - Microsoft Flight Simulator 2004: A Century of Flight -- 2003 flight simulation computer game
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Wikipedia - Microsoft Flight Simulator X -- Flight simulation computer game
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Wikipedia - Microsoft OneNote -- Free-form note-taking app for personal computers and smartphones
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Wikipedia - Microsoft Windows -- Family of computer operating systems developed by Microsoft
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Wikipedia - MicroVAX -- Family of low-cost minicomputers
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Wikipedia - Middleware -- Computer software that provides services to software applications
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Wikipedia - MIDI keyboard -- Piano-style keyboard that sends MIDI inputs to a computer or device
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Wikipedia - Midrange computer -- Class of computer systems that fall in between mainframes and minicomputers
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Wikipedia - Migration Assistant (Apple) -- macOS software utility developed by Apple that transfers data from an existing computer or full drive backup to a new computer
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Wikipedia - Mihaela Cardei -- Romanian-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mihaela van der Schaar -- computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mihai Ptracu (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Mike Paterson -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mike Shapiro (programmer) -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Mikey Dickerson -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - MikroDatorn -- Swedish computer magazine
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Wikipedia - Military computers
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Wikipedia - Millipede memory -- Novel type of computer memory
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Wikipedia - Milton Smith -- American computer security application developer, researcher, and writer
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Wikipedia - Mindstorms: Children, Computers, and Powerful Ideas
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Wikipedia - Ming C. Lin -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Minh Le -- Vietnamese-Canadian computer game developer who created the mod ''Counter-Strike''
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Wikipedia - Mini-computers
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Wikipedia - Minicomputers
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Wikipedia - Mini computer
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Wikipedia - Minicomputer -- Mid-1960s-late-1980s class of smaller computers
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Wikipedia - Minimal instruction set computer -- CPU architecture
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Wikipedia - Minisupercomputer
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Wikipedia - Minsk family of computers
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Wikipedia - MIPS Computer Systems Inc.
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Wikipedia - MIPS Computer Systems
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Wikipedia - Mira Mezini -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - MIR (computer)
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Wikipedia - Miredo -- Tunneling client allowing connectivity between IPv6 and IPv4 computers
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Wikipedia - Mireille Broucke -- electrical and computer engineer
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Wikipedia - Mirella Lapata -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mirka Miller -- Czech-Australian mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mitchell Waite -- Computer book writer
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Wikipedia - MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory -- CS and AI Laboratory at MIT
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Wikipedia - MIT Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department
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Wikipedia - MIT General Circulation Model -- A numerical computer method that solves the equations of motion for the ocean or atmosphere using the finite volume method
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Wikipedia - MIT Laboratory for Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Moana (2016 film) -- 2016 computer animated film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios
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Wikipedia - MOBIDIC -- Transistorized computer
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Wikipedia - Mobile computers
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Wikipedia - Mobile computer
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Wikipedia - Mobile computing -- Human-computer interaction in which a computer is expected to be transported during normal usage
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Wikipedia - Mod (computer gaming)
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Wikipedia - Model M keyboard -- Series of computer keyboards
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Wikipedia - Modular connector -- Electrical connector commonly used in telephone and computer networks
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Wikipedia - Mohamed Fayad -- Egyptian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Mohamed G. Gouda -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Moj mikro -- Slovene-language computer magazine
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Wikipedia - Molecular computer
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Wikipedia - Molecular graphics -- Computer graphics
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Wikipedia - Molly Holzschlag -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - MONIAC -- Fluidic analogue computer simulating the UK ecomomy
|
Wikipedia - Monica S. Lam -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Monika Henzinger -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Monique Laurent -- French computer scientist and mathematician
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Wikipedia - Monoculture (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Mono (software) -- Computer software project
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Wikipedia - Monsters vs. Aliens (TV series) -- American computer-animated television series
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Wikipedia - Monte Davidoff -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Monty Taylor -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Mor Harchol-Balter -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - MorphOS -- Amiga-compatible computer operating system
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Wikipedia - Morris worm -- Late 1980s computer worm noted for being the first to gain wider media attention
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Wikipedia - Morrow Pivot II -- 1985 personal computer
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Wikipedia - Moses Charikar -- Indian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - MOS Technology VIC-II -- Video microchip in the Commodore 64 and C128 home computers
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Wikipedia - Mouse (computer)
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Wikipedia - Moustafa Youssef -- Egyptian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - MPC Corporation -- American computer hardware company
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Wikipedia - MP/M -- Discontinued family of computer operating systems
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Wikipedia - MS-DOS -- Discontinued computer operating system
|
Wikipedia - MSX -- a family of standardized home computer architectures released between 1983 and 1990
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Wikipedia - M. Tamer M-CM-^Vzsu -- Computer scientist (b. 1951)
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Wikipedia - Muffy Calder -- Computer Scientist
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Wikipedia - MULE -- Computer software
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Wikipedia - M.U.L.E. -- Turn-based economics strategy simulation computer game of 1983
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Wikipedia - Multicast routing -- computer networking protocol for forwarding transmissions from one sender to multiple receivers
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Wikipedia - Multicast -- Computer networking technique for transmission from one sender to multiple receivers
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Wikipedia - Multi-factor authentication -- Method of computer access control
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Wikipedia - Multithreading (computer architecture)
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Wikipedia - Multivac -- Fictional supercomputer in several science fiction stories by American writer Isaac Asimov
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Wikipedia - Muneeb Ali -- Pakistani-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Music download -- Digital transfer of music from an Internet-facing computer or website to a user's local desktop computer
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Wikipedia - Music Macro Language -- Programming language for generating computerized music
|
Wikipedia - Mustafa Akgul -- Turkish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Myra Wilson -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Myron W. Krueger -- American computer artist
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Wikipedia - MyTunes -- Computer program
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Wikipedia - Nada Golmie -- American computer scientist and engineer
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Wikipedia - Nadia Heninger -- American cryptographer, computer security expert
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Wikipedia - Nadia Magnenat Thalmann -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nagios -- Computer system and network monitoring application software
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Wikipedia - Nalini Venkatasubramanian -- Indian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Name server -- Computer hardware or software server
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Wikipedia - Nancy D. Griffeth -- American computer scientist and mathematician
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Wikipedia - Nancy Hafkin -- South African computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nancy M. Amato -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nancy R. Mead -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nanocomputer
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Wikipedia - Nano-RAM -- Novel computer memory type
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Wikipedia - Narayanan Shivakumar -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - N. Asokan -- Professor of Computer Science at University of Waterloo
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Wikipedia - Nassib Nassar -- American computer scientist and classical pianist
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Wikipedia - Natalie Enright Jerger -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Natalie Jeremijenko -- Artist; computer researcher
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Wikipedia - Natalie Rusk -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - NataM-EM-!a Jonoska -- Macedonian mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nathaniel Borenstein -- American computer scientist and designers of the MIME protocol
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Wikipedia - Nathaniel Rochester (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - National Center for Supercomputer Applications
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Wikipedia - National Computer Conference
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Wikipedia - National Computer Security Center
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Wikipedia - National Computer Training and Research Academy -- Research institute in Bangladesh
|
Wikipedia - National Development Programme in Computer Aided Learning
|
Wikipedia - National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center -- Supercomputer facility operated by the US Department of Energy in Berkeley, California
|
Wikipedia - National Supercomputer Center in Guangzhou
|
Wikipedia - National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences -- School
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Wikipedia - Natural language processing -- Field of computer science and linguistics
|
Wikipedia - Navy Operational Global Atmospheric Prediction System Model -- Weather prediction computer model
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Wikipedia - Nebulae (computer)
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Wikipedia - Neil Lawrence -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Neil Siegel -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nell B. Dale -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - NetBIOS -- API allowing applications on separate computers to communicate over LAN via the session layer
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Wikipedia - NetHack -- Classical roguelike ASCII graphics computer game released in 1987
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Wikipedia - Netscape -- American computer services company
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Wikipedia - NetWare -- Computer network operating system developed by Novell, Inc
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Wikipedia - Network administrator -- Individual that is responsible for the maintenance of computer hardware and software systems that make up a computer network
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Wikipedia - Network and service management taxonomy -- Classification system for research on computer networks
|
Wikipedia - Network-attached storage -- Computer data storage server
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Wikipedia - Network Computer
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Wikipedia - Network computer
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Wikipedia - Network Computing -- computer networking tech news
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Wikipedia - Network Control Program -- Obsolete program that provided the middle layers of the protocol stack running on host computers of the ARPANET
|
Wikipedia - Network enclave -- Limited access computer network
|
Wikipedia - Networking hardware -- Devices that mediate data transmission in a computer network
|
Wikipedia - Network management -- the dicipline of administering and managing computer networks
|
Wikipedia - Network mapping -- Study of a computer network's physical connections
|
Wikipedia - Network News Transfer Protocol -- Computer network protocol
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Wikipedia - Network operating system -- Computer software for running local area networks
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Wikipedia - Network security -- Computer network access control
|
Wikipedia - Network topology -- Arrangement of the various elements of a computer network; topological structure of a network and may be depicted physically or logically
|
Wikipedia - Neuralink -- American brain-computer interface company
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Wikipedia - NewHope -- Cryptographic protocol designed to resist quantum computer attacks
|
Wikipedia - New media -- Forms of media native to computers
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Wikipedia - Newton Lee -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - New York Institute of Technology Computer Graphics Lab
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Wikipedia - NeXT Computer
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Wikipedia - Next Gen (film) -- 2018 computer-animated science fiction film directed by Kevin R. Adams and Joe Ksander
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Wikipedia - NeXT -- American computer company
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Wikipedia - Nexus 9 -- Google's Android Tablet computer
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Wikipedia - Nicholas Ayache -- Computer Scientist
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Wikipedia - Nichole Pinkard -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nick Collins (composer) -- British academic and computer music composer
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Wikipedia - Nick Gerakines -- American writer and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Nick Pippenger -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nicky Robinson (game programmer) -- Computer game programmer
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Wikipedia - Nico Habermann -- Dutch computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nicola Leone -- Italian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nicola Pellow -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nicole Immorlica -- Theoretical computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nicole Megow -- German mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Niels Provos -- German-American computer scientist and software engineer
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Wikipedia - Nils John Nilsson -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nimatron -- First computer game
|
Wikipedia - Nimbus Data -- American computer data storage software
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Wikipedia - Nimda -- Malicious file infecting computer worm
|
Wikipedia - Nimrod (computer)
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Wikipedia - Nina Amenta -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nitin Saxena -- Indian mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nixdorf Computer
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Wikipedia - NLS (computer system)
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Wikipedia - NLTSS -- Supercomputer operating system
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Wikipedia - Node (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Nokia Lumia 2520 -- Tablet computer by Nokia
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Wikipedia - Non-breaking space -- In computer text processing, a space character that prevents an automatic line break at its position
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Wikipedia - NonStop (server computers)
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Wikipedia - NonVisual Desktop Access -- Software to describe a computer display for visually impaired users
|
Wikipedia - Non-volatile memory -- Computer memory that does not lose its contents after being turned off
|
Wikipedia - Non-volatile random-access memory -- Type of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Noor Shaker -- Syrian-Danish computer scientist and entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Norbert Fuhr -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Nord-100 -- 16-bit microcomputer series
|
Wikipedia - Norman Abramson -- American engineer and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Norman E. Gibbs -- American mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Norman Margolus -- Canadian-American physicist and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Norsk Data -- Norwegian computer manufacturer
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Wikipedia - North American Computer Chess Championship
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Wikipedia - Norton Internet Security -- Computer protection software
|
Wikipedia - Norwegian Research Center for Computers and Law
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Wikipedia - NRDS Dhamdhama -- Private computer institute in India
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Wikipedia - Ntopng -- Free software for monitoring traffic on a computer network
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Wikipedia - Nuclear magnetic resonance quantum computer
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Wikipedia - Numerical Electromagnetics Code -- Computer program for antenna modeling
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Wikipedia - Num Lock -- Computer key
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Wikipedia - Nuria Oliver -- Spanish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - NVDIMM -- Type of random-access memory for computers
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Wikipedia - Nvidia Drive -- Computer platform by Nvidia
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Wikipedia - Nvidia Tesla Personal Supercomputer
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Wikipedia - NVIR -- Computer virus
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Wikipedia - Object (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Object recognition (computer vision)
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Wikipedia - Octuple-precision floating-point format -- 256-bit computer number format
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Wikipedia - OCZ -- Former American computer hardware manufacturer
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Wikipedia - Oded Regev (Computer Scientist)
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Wikipedia - Odra (computer)
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Wikipedia - Offline reader -- Computer software
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Wikipedia - Offset (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Ohio Supercomputer Center
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Wikipedia - Olga Russakovsky -- Russian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Olga Sorkine-Hornung -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Olive, the Other Reindeer -- American 2D computer-animated Christmas film
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Wikipedia - OLPC XO -- Inexpensive subnotebook computer intended to be distributed to children in developing countries around the world
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Wikipedia - Omega (computer science)
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Wikipedia - OmegaT -- Computer assisted translation tool written in Java
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Wikipedia - One instruction set computer
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Wikipedia - One-instruction set computer -- Abstract machine that uses only one instruction
|
Wikipedia - One-way quantum computer
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Wikipedia - Online Computer Library Center
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Wikipedia - Onshape -- Computer-aided design software system
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Wikipedia - On the Cruelty of Really Teaching Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Ontology (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Ontology language (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Oo-Topos -- Interactive fiction computer game first made for the Apple II in 1981
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Wikipedia - Op5 Monitor -- Computer system and network monitoring application software
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Wikipedia - OpenBCI -- Open-source brain-computer interface platform
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Wikipedia - OpenCV -- Computer vision library
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Wikipedia - Open Firmware -- Standard for computer bootstrap code
|
Wikipedia - Open-shop scheduling -- Scheduling problem in computer science
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Wikipedia - OpenSSH -- Set of computer programs providing encrypted communication sessions
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Wikipedia - OpenVMS -- Computer operating system
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Wikipedia - OpenWindows -- Computer desktop environment
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Wikipedia - Open world -- Type of computer game design
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Wikipedia - Operating Systems: Design and Implementation -- Computer science textbook
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Wikipedia - Operating system -- Software that manages computer hardware resources
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Wikipedia - Operation Match -- The first computer dating service in the United States
|
Wikipedia - Operator (computer programming) -- Construct associated with a mathematical operation in computer programs
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Wikipedia - Operators in C and C++ -- Similar syntax in both computer languages
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Wikipedia - Optical computing -- Computer that uses photons or light waves
|
Wikipedia - Optical mouse -- Type of computer mouse
|
Wikipedia - Optical storage -- Method to store and retrieve computer data using optics
|
Wikipedia - Optimization (computer science)
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Wikipedia - ORACLE (computer)
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Wikipedia - Oracle Corporation -- American multinational computer technology corporation Stock going up to 90.00 a share
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Wikipedia - Oracle Grid Engine -- Batch-queuing system for computer clusters
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Wikipedia - Orchestration (computing) -- Automated configuration, coordination, and management of computer systems and software
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Wikipedia - Order of operations -- In mathematics and computer science, order in which operations are performed
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Wikipedia - Orders of magnitude (data) -- Computer data measurements and scales.
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Wikipedia - ORDVAC -- Ordnance Discrete Variable Automatic Computer
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Wikipedia - Orna Kupferman -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Oskar von Stryk -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Otavio Good -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Otsu's method -- In computer vision and image processing
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Wikipedia - Outline of computer engineering
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Wikipedia - Outline of computer programming
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Wikipedia - Outline of computer science
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Wikipedia - Outline of computer security
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Wikipedia - Outline of computers
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Wikipedia - Outline of computer vision
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Wikipedia - Out of memory -- State of computer operation where no additional memory can be allocated
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Wikipedia - Outstanding Contribution to Computer Science Education
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Wikipedia - Overclocking -- Practice of increasing the clock rate of a computer to exceed that certified by the manufacturer
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Wikipedia - Oxford University Department of Computer Science
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Wikipedia - P2P caching -- Computer network traffic management technology
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Wikipedia - Packard Bell -- Dutch-based computer manufacturing subsidiary of Acer
|
Wikipedia - Paco MenM-CM-)ndez -- Spanish computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Padma Raghavan -- Indian-born computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Page 6 -- Defunct British computer magazine
|
Wikipedia - Page (computer memory) -- Fixed-length contiguous block of virtual memory
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Wikipedia - Palette (computing) -- In computer graphics, a finite set of colors
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Wikipedia - Pamela Cosman -- Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering
|
Wikipedia - Pamela Zave -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - P. Anandan -- Indian computer scientist and businessman
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Wikipedia - Pandora FMS -- Software for monitoring computer networks
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Wikipedia - Paned window (computing) -- Computer user interface window that is divided into sections known as "panes"
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Wikipedia - Panel (computer software)
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Wikipedia - Paola Bonizzoni -- Italian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Paola Flocchini -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Paola Velardi -- Professor of computer science
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Wikipedia - Paper data storage -- Use of paper as computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Paralives -- Upcoming life simulation computer game
|
Wikipedia - Parallel computer hardware
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Wikipedia - Parallel Computers, Inc. -- American computer manufacturing company
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Wikipedia - Parallel computers
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Wikipedia - Parallel computer
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Wikipedia - Parallel port -- Computer interface
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Wikipedia - Parallel programming model -- Abstraction of parallel computer architecture, with which it is convenient to express algorithms and their composition in programs
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Wikipedia - Parallel RAM -- Abstract computer for designing parallel algorithms
|
Wikipedia - Parameter (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Parameter (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Paritosh Pandya -- Indian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Partial word -- Computer science string term
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Wikipedia - Pascal Van Hentenryck -- Belgian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Password cracking -- Recovering passwords from data that has been stored in or transmitted by a computer system
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Wikipedia - Patch (computing) -- Piece of software designed to update a computer program to fix or improve it
|
Wikipedia - Pat Hanrahan -- American computer graphics researcher
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Wikipedia - Pat Hayes -- Computer science researcher in artificial intelligence
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Wikipedia - Pathfinding -- Plotting by a computer application
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Wikipedia - Patinho Feio -- First minicomputer created entirely in Brazil
|
Wikipedia - Patricia D. Lopez -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Patrician IV -- Historical trading simulation computer game
|
Wikipedia - Patricia Selinger -- American computer scientist and IBM Fellow
|
Wikipedia - Patrick Buckland -- British computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Patrick Cousot -- French computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Patrick Jaillet -- French-American electrical engineer and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Patrick J. Hanratty -- American computer scientist and businessperson
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Wikipedia - Patrick Piemonte -- American interface designer and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Patterson Hume -- Canadian computer scientist and physicist (b. 1923, d. 2013)
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Wikipedia - Paula (computer chip)
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Wikipedia - Paul A. D. de Maine -- American computer scientist (1924-1999)
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Wikipedia - Paul Brainerd -- American computer programmer in the field of computer-aided editing, design and publishing.
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Wikipedia - Paul Buchheit -- American computer engineer; created Gmail
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Wikipedia - Paul Dourish -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Paul F. Whelan -- Irish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Paul Graham (computer programmer)
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Wikipedia - Paul Haeberli -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Paul Jones (computer technologist)
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Wikipedia - Paul Syverson -- Computer scientist and mathematician at the US Naval Research Laboratory, inventor of onion routing
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Wikipedia - Paul Viola -- American computer vision researcher
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Wikipedia - Paul Vitanyi -- Dutch theoretical computer scientist
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Wikipedia - PAW Patrol: The Movie -- Computer-animated film
|
Wikipedia - Paxos (computer science)
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Wikipedia - PC Direct -- Defunct British computer magazine
|
Wikipedia - PCI Express -- Computer expansion bus standard
|
Wikipedia - PC World -- Computer magazine
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Wikipedia - PDP-10 -- 36 bit mainframe computer family built 1966-1983
|
Wikipedia - PDP-11 -- Series of 16-bit minicomputers
|
Wikipedia - PDP-1 -- Computer
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Wikipedia - PDP-8/E -- 1970 model of the DEC PDP-8 line of minicomputers
|
Wikipedia - PDP-8 -- First commercially successful minicomputer
|
Wikipedia - Pearl Pu -- Swiss computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Pedro Felipe Felzenszwalb -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Pegasus (computer)
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Wikipedia - Penetration test -- Method of evaluating computer and network security by simulating a cyber attack
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Wikipedia - People's Computer Company
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Wikipedia - Performer (Computer Graphics API)
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Wikipedia - Peripheral -- Auxiliary input/output device for a computer
|
Wikipedia - PERM (computer)
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Wikipedia - Perry O. Crawford Jr. -- American computer engineer (1917-2006)
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Wikipedia - Persistence (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Personal area network -- Computer network centered on an individual person's workspace
|
Wikipedia - Personal Computer Games -- Defunct British magazine
|
Wikipedia - Personal computer game
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Wikipedia - Personal computer hardware
|
Wikipedia - Personal Computer Magazine -- Dutch computing magazine
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Wikipedia - Personal Computer Memory Card International Association -- Computing industry body
|
Wikipedia - Personal Computer News -- Defunct British computer review magazine
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Wikipedia - Personal computer revolution
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Wikipedia - Personal computers
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Wikipedia - Personal Computer
|
Wikipedia - Personal computer -- Computer intended for use by an individual person
|
Wikipedia - Personal Computer World -- British computer magazine
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Wikipedia - Personal supercomputer
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Wikipedia - Petals ESB -- Type of computer software
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Wikipedia - Petascale computing -- Computer systems capable of one petaFLOPS
|
Wikipedia - Peter Buneman -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Peter Chen -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Peter Druschel -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Peter Gutmann (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Peter H. Salus -- American linguist and computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Peter J. Denning -- American computer scientist and writer
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Wikipedia - Peter Landin -- British computer scientist (1930-2009)
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Wikipedia - Peter Lee (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Peter Lucas (computer scientist) -- Austrian computer scientist and professor
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Wikipedia - Peter MacDonald (computer programmer)
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Wikipedia - Peter Mattis -- American computer programmer, entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Peter Mosses -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Peter Nordin -- Computer Scientist
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Wikipedia - Peter Robinson (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Peter Samson -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Peter Sanders (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Peter Schnell -- German computer scientist and entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Peter Sheridan Dodds -- American computer scientist and professor
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Wikipedia - Peter Smith (computer scientist) -- British university professor (born 1956)
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Wikipedia - Peter T. Kirstein -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Petit Computer
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Wikipedia - Petra Mutzel -- German computer scientist
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Wikipedia - PETSCII -- Character encoding on Commodore computers
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Wikipedia - Phase-change memory -- Novel computer memory type
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Wikipedia - Phil Farrand -- American computer programmer and consultant, webmaster and author
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Wikipedia - Phil Husbands -- English academic and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Philip Emeagwali -- Nigerian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Philip Hazel -- British computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Philippa Gardner -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Philip Wadler -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Phillip Hallam-Baker -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Philosophy of computer science
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Wikipedia - Phoenix (computer) -- IBM mainframe computer
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Wikipedia - Phyllis Fox -- American mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Physical access -- Ability of people to physically gain access to a computer system
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Wikipedia - Physically based rendering -- Computer graphics technique
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Wikipedia - Pico (text editor) -- Text editor for Unix and Unix-based computer systems
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Wikipedia - Pieter Van den Abeele -- Computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Pinar Heggernes -- Turkish-born Norwegian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Pin (computer program)
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Wikipedia - Pine64 -- Company building ARM based computers
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Wikipedia - Ping Fu -- Chinese computer scientist and entrepreneur
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Wikipedia - Ping (networking utility) -- Computer network administration utility used to test the reachability of a host
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Wikipedia - Ping of death -- Attack on a computer system that involves sending a malformed or otherwise malicious ping to a computer
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Wikipedia - Pingus -- Computer game
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Wikipedia - Pip-Boy -- Fictional wearable computer in the post-apocalyptic Fallout video game franchise
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Wikipedia - Pixar Image Computer
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Wikipedia - Pixar -- American computer-animation studio
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Wikipedia - Piz Daint (supercomputer)
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Wikipedia - Pizza box form factor -- Style of computer or other device case
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Wikipedia - Placeholder (Computer syntax)
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Wikipedia - Plain text -- Term for computer data consisting only of unformatted characters of readable material
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Wikipedia - Plankton and Karen -- Antagonists of the animated series SpongeBob SquarePants; Plankton, a green planktonic copepod, and Karen, a waterproof supercomputer
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Wikipedia - Platinum Technology -- Defunct computer software company
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Wikipedia - PLATO (computer system)
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Wikipedia - PlayStation Move -- Motion game controller by Sony Computer Entertainment
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Wikipedia - Plotter -- Computer output device that draws lines on paper by moving a pen
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Wikipedia - Plug computer
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Wikipedia - Pocket computer
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Wikipedia - Pocket PC -- Obsolete type of computer, similar to smartphones
|
Wikipedia - Pocket-sized computer -- Type of hardware devices
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Wikipedia - Point and click -- Computer technique
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Wikipedia - Pointer (computer programming) -- Object which stores memory addresses in a computer program
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Wikipedia - Pointer (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Point of no return (computer games)
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Wikipedia - Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol -- Computer network protocol
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Wikipedia - Police National Computer -- UK database of criminal, driving and property records
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Wikipedia - Polling (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Polygon (computer graphics)
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Wikipedia - Polymorphism (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Pool (computer science) -- Collection of computer resources that are kept ready to use rather than acquired on use and released afterwards
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Wikipedia - Portability (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Portable computer
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Wikipedia - Portable Draughts Notation -- Computer data format for recording draughts games
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Wikipedia - Portable Game Notation -- Computer format for recording chess games
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Wikipedia - Portal:Computer programming
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Wikipedia - Portal (computer) -- 1980 portable microcomputer
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Wikipedia - Port (computer networking) -- Communications endpoint in an operating system
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Wikipedia - Poser -- 3D computer graphics program optimized for modeling of human figures
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Wikipedia - Post-quantum cryptography -- Cryptography that is secure against quantum computers
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Wikipedia - Potentially unwanted program -- Computer software which can be perceived as unwanted and/or harmful
|
Wikipedia - PowerBook 190, PowerBook 190cs -- Laptop computers manufactured by Apple Computer
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Wikipedia - PowerBook 500 series -- Range of Apple Macintosh PowerBook portable computers
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Wikipedia - PowerBook Duo -- Line of subnotebooks manufactured and sold by Apple Computer
|
Wikipedia - PowerBook G3 -- Line of laptop Macintosh computers
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Wikipedia - Power ISA -- Computer instruction set architecture
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Wikipedia - Power Mac G4 Cube -- Personal computer by Apple
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Wikipedia - Power Mac G4 -- Series of personal computers
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Wikipedia - Power Mac G5 -- A line of tower computers designed and manufactured by Apple.
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Wikipedia - Power Macintosh 6100 -- First computer from Apple to use the PowerPC processor
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Wikipedia - Power supply unit (computer)
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Wikipedia - Power Unlimited -- Dutch computer and video games magazine
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Wikipedia - Practical Computing -- Monthly UK computer magazine
|
Wikipedia - Prasad V. Tetali -- Indian-American mathematician and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Precision (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Precompiled header -- Optimized type of file in computer programming
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Wikipedia - Preemption (computing) -- Act of temporarily interrupting a task being carried out by a computer system, without requiring its cooperation, and with the intention of resuming the task at a later time
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Wikipedia - Prentice Hall International Series in Computer Science
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Wikipedia - President of the British Computer Society
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Wikipedia - Pretty Good Privacy -- Computer program for data encryption, primarily in email
|
Wikipedia - Prime Computer
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Wikipedia - Primitives (computer graphics)
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Wikipedia - Principle of least astonishment -- Principle in computer system design
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Wikipedia - Printer (computing) -- Computer peripheral that prints text or graphics
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Wikipedia - Priority queue -- Abstract data type in computer science
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Wikipedia - Prith Banerjee -- Indian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Privacy-invasive software -- Computer software ignoring user privacy with a commercial intent
|
Wikipedia - Privilege (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Privilege escalation -- Gaining control of computer privileges beyond what is normally granted
|
Wikipedia - Procedure (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Process (computing) -- Particular execution of a computer program
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Wikipedia - Processor Technology -- Personal computer company, founded 1975
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Wikipedia - Pro Display XDR -- Computer monitor sold by Apple Inc.
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Wikipedia - Production (computer science) -- In computer science, a rewrite rule specifying a substitution that can be recursively performed to generate new sequences
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Wikipedia - Production system (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Professional certification (computer technology)
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Wikipedia - Profile-guided optimization -- Compiler optimization technique in computer programming that uses profiling to improve program runtime performance
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Wikipedia - Profiler (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Profiling (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Program analysis (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Programmable computer
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Wikipedia - Programmable logic controller -- Programmable digital computer used to control machinery
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Wikipedia - Programmable ROM -- Type of solid state computer memory that becomes read only after being written once
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Wikipedia - Programmed Data Processor -- Name used for several lines of minicomputers
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Wikipedia - Programmer -- Person who writes computer software
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Wikipedia - Programming by demonstration -- Technique for teaching a computer or a robot new behaviors
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Wikipedia - Programming language implementation -- System for executing computer programs
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Wikipedia - Programming language theory -- |Branch of computer science
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Wikipedia - Project Sauron -- A computer malware
|
Wikipedia - Proposed directive on the patentability of computer-implemented inventions
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Wikipedia - Protection ring -- Layer of protection in computer systems
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Wikipedia - Protocol (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Protocol Wars -- Computer science debate
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Wikipedia - Proview International Holdings -- Chinese manufacturer of computer monitors
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Wikipedia - Proxy server -- Computer server that makes and receives requests on behalf of a user
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Wikipedia - Pseudocode -- Informal high-level description of the operation of a computer program or other algorithm
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Wikipedia - Psystar Corporation -- American computer company
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Wikipedia - PTS-DOS -- Computer operating system for x86 processors
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Wikipedia - Purism (company) -- Computer manufacturer focusing on software freedom
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Wikipedia - P versus NP problem -- Unsolved problem in computer science
|
Wikipedia - Pwn2Own -- Computer hacking contest
|
Wikipedia - Pyramid of doom (programming) -- Computer programming problem
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Wikipedia - Q-Bus -- Computer bus
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Wikipedia - Qi Lu (computer scientist) -- Chinese software executive and engineer
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Wikipedia - Qimonda -- 2006-2011 German computer memory manufacturer
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Wikipedia - Quadruple-precision floating-point format -- 128-bit computer number format
|
Wikipedia - Quanta Computer -- Taiwan-based manufacturer of notebook computers and other electronic hardware
|
Wikipedia - Quantum computers
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Wikipedia - Quantum computer
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Wikipedia - Quantum memory -- Quantum-mechanical version of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Quarantine (antivirus program) -- Act of isolating computer files with viruses
|
Wikipedia - Quentin Stafford-Fraser -- Computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Quest for Camelot Dragon Games -- 1998 children's computer game by Knowledge Adventure
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Wikipedia - Question answering -- Computer science discipline
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Wikipedia - QUIC -- New transport layer computer network protocol
|
Wikipedia - Racetrack memory -- Novel computer memory type
|
Wikipedia - Rachel Harrison (computer scientist) -- British computer scientist and software engineer
|
Wikipedia - Rachel Sibande -- Malawian technology expert and computer scientist.
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Wikipedia - Rachel Thomas (academic) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Rachid Guerraoui -- Moroccan-Swiss computer scientist and academic
|
Wikipedia - Radeon -- Brand of computer products
|
Wikipedia - Radhika Nagpal -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Radiosity (computer graphics) -- Computer graphics rendering method using diffuse reflection
|
Wikipedia - RADIUS -- Computer network protocol
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Wikipedia - Rael Dornfest -- American computer programmer and author
|
Wikipedia - Raft (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Raissa D'Souza -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Raja Koduri -- Computer engineer at Intel
|
Wikipedia - Raj Reddy -- Indian-American computer scientist (born 1937)
|
Wikipedia - Rakesh Agrawal (computer scientist)
|
Wikipedia - Ralph Johnson (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Rama Akkiraju -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Rambo (1985 video game) -- 1985 computer game
|
Wikipedia - Rana el Kaliouby -- Egyptian-American computer scientist and entrepreneur
|
Wikipedia - Randal Bryant -- American computer scientist (born 1952)
|
Wikipedia - Random-access memory -- Form of computer data storage
|
Wikipedia - Randomized benchmarking -- Method for assessing quantum computer hardware capabilities
|
Wikipedia - Randy Pausch -- American professor of computer science, human-computer interaction and design
|
Wikipedia - Randy Suess -- American computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Rango (2011 film) -- 2011 computer-animated Western comedy film directed by Gore Verbinski
|
Wikipedia - Rapelang Rabana -- Computer scientist, Entrepreneur, and keynote speaker
|
Wikipedia - Rascal (single-board computer)
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Wikipedia - Raspberry Pi -- Series of inexpensive single-board computers used for educational purposes and embedded systems
|
Wikipedia - Raymond J. Mooney -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ray Tomlinson -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Ray Turner (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - RDI PowerLite -- Series of SPARC-based laptop computers
|
Wikipedia - RDRAND -- Computer instruction for returning hardware-generated random numbers
|
Wikipedia - Reachability analysis -- Solution to the reachability problem in distributed systems (computer science)
|
Wikipedia - Real computer
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Wikipedia - Real-time computer graphics
|
Wikipedia - Rebecca Bace -- American computer security expert
|
Wikipedia - Rebecca Garcia -- American computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Rebecca Grinter -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Rebecca Mercuri -- American expert in computer security
|
Wikipedia - Rebecca N. Wright -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - ReBoot: The Guardian Code -- 2018 reimagining of 1994's computer-animated TV series ''ReBoot''
|
Wikipedia - Reboot -- Process by which a computer system is restarted
|
Wikipedia - Recordable offence -- Offence that must be recorded on the Police National Computer in England and Wales
|
Wikipedia - Record (computer science) -- Information block that is part of a database (data row)
|
Wikipedia - Recursion (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Rediet Abebe -- Ethiopian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Redshift (software) -- Computer display color temperature auto-adjuster
|
Wikipedia - Reduce (computer algebra system)
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Wikipedia - Reduced instruction set computer -- Processor executing one instruction in minimal clock cycles
|
Wikipedia - Reeves AN/TPQ-2 Close Air Support System -- | post-World War II radar/computer/communications system
|
Wikipedia - Reference (computer science)
|
Wikipedia - Reflection (computer graphics) -- Simulation of reflective surfaces
|
Wikipedia - Reflection (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Reflection (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Regan Mandryk -- Canadian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Regina Barzilay -- Computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Regius Professor of Computer Science
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Wikipedia - Reification (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Reiser4 -- Computer file system, successor to ReiserFS
|
Wikipedia - Reliability (computer networking)
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Wikipedia - Remote administration -- Control of computer from remote location
|
Wikipedia - Remote Desktop Protocol -- Proprietary protocol that can provide a user with the graphical interface from another remote computer
|
Wikipedia - Remote desktop software -- Software that allows a personal computer's desktop environment to be run remotely on a server or PC
|
Wikipedia - Rena Gasimova -- Azerbaijani computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Rendering (computer graphics) -- Process of generating an image from a model
|
Wikipedia - Replication (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Resilient Packet Ring -- Technology for computer networking
|
Wikipedia - Resistive random-access memory -- Novel type of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Resource (computer science)
|
Wikipedia - Resource leak -- A particular type of resource consumption problem by a computer program where the program does not release resources it has acquired
|
Wikipedia - Responsive computer-aided design
|
Wikipedia - Reynold B. Johnson -- American inventor and computer pioneer
|
Wikipedia - RFB protocol -- Computer network protocol
|
Wikipedia - Rhinoceros 3D -- 3D computer graphics software
|
Wikipedia - Rice Institute Computer
|
Wikipedia - Richard Bird (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Richard Brodie (programmer) -- American computer programmer and author
|
Wikipedia - Richard Milton Bloch -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Richard Stearns (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Richard Turner (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Richard Wallace (scientist) -- American computer programmer
|
Wikipedia - Rich Hickey -- Computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Ric Weiland -- American computer software pioneer and philanthropist
|
Wikipedia - Rina Dechter -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ring (computer security)
|
Wikipedia - RISC OS -- computer operating system by Acorn Computers Ltd
|
Wikipedia - Rishab Aiyer Ghosh -- Indian journalist, computer scientist, Open-source software advocate and software entrepreneur
|
Wikipedia - Rising Sun (video game) -- 2000 computer wargame
|
Wikipedia - Rita Cucchiara -- Italian Electrical and Computer Engineer
|
Wikipedia - Rita Orji -- Nigerian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Rivka Ladin -- American computer specialist
|
Wikipedia - RK05 -- Disk drive for Digital Equipment Corporation minicomputers
|
Wikipedia - Roadrunner (supercomputer)
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Wikipedia - Robert B. Schnabel -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Robert C. Seacord -- American computer security expert
|
Wikipedia - Robert D. Macredie -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Robert Everett (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Robert Fano -- Italian-American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Robert Fourer -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Robert Harper (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Robert Iannucci -- Americana computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Robert Lafore -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Robert Mercer -- American computer scientist, businessman and funder of right-wing causes
|
Wikipedia - Robert M. Graham -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Roberto Ierusalimschy -- Brazilian computer scientist (born 1960)
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Wikipedia - Robert S. Boyer -- American mathematician, computer scientist and philosopher
|
Wikipedia - Robert Sedgewick (computer scientist) -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Robert S. Lancaster -- American computer programmer and skeptical activist
|
Wikipedia - Robert SzelepcsM-CM-)nyi -- Slovak computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Robert Tappan Morris -- American computer scientist; creator of Morris Worm; associate professor at MIT
|
Wikipedia - Robert Taylor (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Robert Watson (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Robin Milner -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Robotron K 1820 -- East German clone of the MicroVAX II computer
|
Wikipedia - Robotron K 1840 -- East German clone of the VAX-11/780 computer
|
Wikipedia - Robustness (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Robyn Owens -- Australian mathematician and computer vision researcher
|
Wikipedia - Roccat -- German computer accessories manufacturer
|
Wikipedia - Rocksteady Studios -- British computer and video game developer
|
Wikipedia - Rod memory -- Type of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Rodnay Zaks -- American computer programmer and author (born 1946)
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Wikipedia - Roger Craig (Jeopardy! contestant) -- American computer scientist, businessman and game show contestant
|
Wikipedia - Roger Dingledine -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Roger Moore (computer scientist)
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Wikipedia - Roger Needham -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Rogue (computer game)
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Wikipedia - Rohini Kesavan Srihari -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Roll-away computer -- Theoretical device
|
Wikipedia - Rollover (key) -- Ability of a computer keyboard to correctly handle several simultaneous keystrokes
|
Wikipedia - Roman Slowinski -- Polish computer scientist, Vice President of Polish Academy of Sciences
|
Wikipedia - Roman Yampolskiy -- Russian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Rona Gurkewitz -- American mathematician and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Ronald Stamper -- British computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ron Sun -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Roopam Sharma -- Indian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Rosalind Picard -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Rose Dieng-Kuntz -- Senegalese computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Rosemary Candlin -- Scottish computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ross Cohen -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Router (computing) -- Device that forwards data packets between computer networks, creating an overlay internetwork
|
Wikipedia - Routing domain -- Computer networking concept
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Wikipedia - Routing Information Protocol -- Computer network protocol
|
Wikipedia - Roxana Geambasu -- Associate professor of Computer Science at Columbia University
|
Wikipedia - Royal Radar Establishment Automatic Computer
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Wikipedia - Roy Clay -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Rozetta Zhilina -- Soviet mathematician and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - RPG Metanoia -- 2010 Philippine 3D computer-animated adventure film
|
Wikipedia - RSA Security -- American computer security company
|
Wikipedia - Ruchi Sanghvi -- Indian computer engineer
|
Wikipedia - Rugged computer
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Wikipedia - Run (magazine) -- Defunct American computer magazine
|
Wikipedia - Russell Kirsch -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Russ Wetmore -- American computer programmer and video game designer
|
Wikipedia - Ruth Aylett -- British Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Ruth Misener -- American computer scientist and academic
|
Wikipedia - Ruzena Bajcsy -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Ryan Williams (computer scientist) -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - S-100 bus -- Early computer bus
|
Wikipedia - S3 Graphics -- U.S.-based computer graphics company
|
Wikipedia - Sabine Susstrunk -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Sabine Van Huffel -- Belgian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Sabre (computer system)
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Wikipedia - Sadia Bashir -- Pakistani computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Sad Satan -- Computer game
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Wikipedia - Saket Modi -- Indian computer company executive
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Wikipedia - Sally Shlaer -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Samantha John -- American engineer. computer programmer and business executive
|
Wikipedia - Sam Curry -- American computer security researcher
|
Wikipedia - Samir Das -- Indian-American computer scientist and engineer
|
Wikipedia - SAML-based products and services -- List of computer security products using Security Assertion Markup Language
|
Wikipedia - Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 -- Tablet computer
|
Wikipedia - Samsung Galaxy Tab series -- Tablet computer series
|
Wikipedia - Samsung Sens -- Notebook computer series made by Samsung Electronics
|
Wikipedia - Samuel Genensky -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Sandbox (computer security) -- Computer security mechanism for isolating running programs from each other in a highly controlled environment
|
Wikipedia - Sandboxie -- Open-source sandboxing computer program
|
Wikipedia - San Diego Supercomputer Center -- Supercomputer at UC San Diego.
|
Wikipedia - Sandra Hutchins -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Sandra Mitchell Hedetniemi -- American mathematician and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Sandra Zilles -- Canadian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Sandy Carter -- American computer scientist, marketer, and businesswoman
|
Wikipedia - Sanghamitra Mohanty -- Indian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Sanja Fidler -- Computer vision researcher
|
Wikipedia - Sanjiva Weerawarana -- Sri Lankan computer scientist and entrepreneur.
|
Wikipedia - SAPO (computer)
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Wikipedia - Sarah Ann Douglas -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Sarah Gordon -- Computer security researcher
|
Wikipedia - Sarita Adve -- Computer scientist and professor
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Wikipedia - Sarit Kraus -- Israeli computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - SCA (computer virus)
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Wikipedia - Scanline rendering -- 3D computer graphics image rendering method
|
Wikipedia - Scatternet -- Type of ad hoc computer network
|
Wikipedia - Scenechronize -- Computer software platform
|
Wikipedia - Schahram Dustdar -- Austrian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton
|
Wikipedia - Scientific American Special Issue on Communications, Computers, and Networks
|
Wikipedia - Scope (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Scores (computer virus)
|
Wikipedia - Scott Guthrie -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Scottish Informatics and Computer Science Alliance
|
Wikipedia - Scott Kirkpatrick -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Scott Meyers -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Scott Werndorfer -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Screencast -- Digital recording of computer screen output
|
Wikipedia - Screen of death -- Computer operating system fatal error display
|
Wikipedia - Screensaver -- Computer program that blanks the screen or fills it with moving images
|
Wikipedia - Screen space ambient occlusion -- Implementation of an ambient occlusion illumination in computer graphics
|
Wikipedia - Script (computer programming)
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Wikipedia - Scroll Lock -- Computer key
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Wikipedia - SCSI -- Set of standards for physically connecting and transferring data between computers and peripheral devices
|
Wikipedia - SDS 930 -- Commercial 24-bit computer using bipolar junction transistors sold in the 1960s
|
Wikipedia - SEAC (computer)
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Wikipedia - Seattle Computer Products
|
Wikipedia - Secure copy protocol -- Network protocol for copying files between computers
|
Wikipedia - Security and Privacy in Computer Systems
|
Wikipedia - Security hacker -- Computer security term; someone who hacks computer systems
|
Wikipedia - Security information and event management -- Computer security
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Wikipedia - Security switch -- Hardware device to protect computers, laptops, smartphones and similar devices from unauthorized access or operation
|
Wikipedia - Segmentation fault -- Computer fault caused by access to restricted memory
|
Wikipedia - Selectron tube -- Early and obsolete type of computer memory
|
Wikipedia - Self-healing (computer science)
|
Wikipedia - Self-management (computer science)
|
Wikipedia - Selmer Bringsjord -- American computer and cognitive scientist
|
Wikipedia - Semantics (computer science) -- The field concerned with the rigorous mathematical study of the meaning of programming languages
|
Wikipedia - Semi-Automatic Ground Environment -- Historic computer network
|
Wikipedia - Sequent Computer Systems
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Wikipedia - Serge Abiteboul -- French computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Serge Belongie -- Professor of Computer Science
|
Wikipedia - Sergey Lebedev (scientist) -- Soviet computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Serial computer
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Wikipedia - Serialization -- Conversion process for computer data
|
Wikipedia - Server (computing) -- Computer to access a central resource or service on a network
|
Wikipedia - Server room -- Room containing computer servers
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Wikipedia - Serviceability (computer)
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Wikipedia - Service discovery -- Automatic detection of devices and services offered by these devices on a computer network
|
Wikipedia - Session (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Session Initiation Protocol -- Computer network protocol
|
Wikipedia - Set (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Severin Hacker -- Computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Seymour Cray Computer Engineering Award
|
Wikipedia - Seymour Cray Computer Science and Engineering Award
|
Wikipedia - Seymour Cray -- Supercomputer architect and engineer
|
Wikipedia - SGI Challenge -- Supercomputer family from Silicon Graphics
|
Wikipedia - SGI Fuel -- Workstation computer from Silicon Graphics
|
Wikipedia - Shadow Network -- China-based computer espionage operation
|
Wikipedia - Shadow of the Beast (1989 video game) -- 1989 computer game
|
Wikipedia - Shadow table -- Object in computer science used to improve the way machines, networks and programs handle information
|
Wikipedia - Shadow volume -- Computer graphics technique
|
Wikipedia - Shafi Goldwasser -- American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Sham Kakade -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Shamoon -- Modular computer virus
|
Wikipedia - Shark Tale -- 2004 American computer-animated comedy film by Vicky Jenson, Bibo Bergeron, and Rob Letterman
|
Wikipedia - Sharla Boehm -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Sharon Oviatt -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Shawn Bayern -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Shawn Fanning -- American computer programmer, entrepreneur, and angel investor
|
Wikipedia - Shay Kutten -- Israeli computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Shazia Sadiq -- Australian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Shearwater Research -- Canadian manufacturer of dive computers and rebreather electronics.
|
Wikipedia - Sheelagh Carpendale -- Canadian computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Sheila Greibach -- American computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Sheila McIlraith -- Professor of Computer Science
|
Wikipedia - Sheree Atcheson -- Sri Lankan-born Irish computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Shikoh Gitau -- Kenyan computer scientist and technology innovator
|
Wikipedia - Shinjini Kundu -- Indian American physician and computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Shlomo Argamon -- computer scientist and forensic linguist
|
Wikipedia - Short Code (computer language)
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Wikipedia - SHRDLU -- Computer program for understanding natural language
|
Wikipedia - Shuchi Chawla -- Indian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Sibel Adali -- Turkish-American computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Siddharth Batra -- Computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Side-channel attack -- Any attack based on information gained from the implementation of a computer system
|
Wikipedia - Side-effect (computer science)
|
Wikipedia - Side effect (computer science) -- Of a function, an additional effect besides returning a value
|
Wikipedia - Sierra (supercomputer) -- Supercomputer developed by IBM
|
Wikipedia - SIGCSE Award for Lifetime Service to Computer Science Education
|
Wikipedia - SIGCSE Award for Outstanding Contribution to Computer Science Education
|
Wikipedia - SIGCSE Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education
|
Wikipedia - SIGGRAPH -- Conference series revolving around 3D computer graphics
|
Wikipedia - Sigil (computer programming) -- Symbol affixed to a variable name
|
Wikipedia - Signal (IPC) -- Form of inter-process communication in computer systems
|
Wikipedia - Signature (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Sihem Amer-Yahia -- Algerian computer scientist
|
Wikipedia - Silicon Graphics International -- Former computer hardware and software company
|
Wikipedia - SimCity -- Computer and video game series
|
Wikipedia - Simmtronics -- Indian computer technology company
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Wikipedia - Template talk:Computer-science-journal-stub
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Wikipedia - Template talk:Computer science
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Wikipedia - Template talk:No cost computer games
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Wikipedia - Template talk:TopicTOC-Computer science
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Wikipedia - Template talk:WikiProject Computer science
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Wikipedia - Tide-predicting machine -- A mechanical analog computer, constructed and set up to predict the ebb and flow of sea tides and the variations in their heights
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Wikipedia - VM-CM-)ronique Cortier -- French mathematician and computer scientist
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Wikipedia - Volatile memory -- Computer memory that loses its contents when unpowered
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Wikipedia - VT100 -- Computer terminal
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Wikipedia - Vulnerability (computer science)
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Wikipedia - Vulnerability (computing) -- exploitable weakness in a computer system
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Wikipedia - Vulnerability database -- Computer security vulnerabilities
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Wikipedia - Wake-on-LAN -- mechanism to wake up computers via a network
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Wikipedia - Wallpaper (computing) -- Digital image used as a decorative background on a computer desktop
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Wikipedia - Warshipping -- Computer security attack via package delivery
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Wikipedia - Wayne Bell -- American computer programmer
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Wikipedia - Wearable computer
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Jef Raskin ::: Born: March 9, 1943; Died: February 26, 2005; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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Dennis Ritchie ::: Born: September 9, 1941; Died: October 12, 2011; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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Rudy Rucker ::: Born: March 22, 1946; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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Ken Thompson ::: Born: February 4, 1943; Occupation: Computer Designer;
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Vernor Vinge ::: Born: October 2, 1944; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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Sergey Brin ::: Born: August 21, 1973; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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Max Levchin ::: Born: July 11, 1975; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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Gerald Weinberg ::: Born: October 27, 1933; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
Leonard Adleman ::: Born: December 31, 1945; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
John McAfee ::: Born: September 18, 1945; Occupation: Computer programmer;
|
George Dantzig ::: Born: November 8, 1914; Died: May 13, 2005; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
James Gosling ::: Born: May 19, 1955; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
Wael Ghonim ::: Born: December 23, 1980; Occupation: Computer Engineer;
|
Brian Kernighan ::: Born: January 1, 1942; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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Aaron Swartz ::: Born: November 8, 1986; Died: January 11, 2013; Occupation: Computer programmer;
|
Edwin Catmull ::: Born: March 31, 1945; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
Jay Wright Forrester ::: Born: July 14, 1918; Died: November 16, 2016; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
Guido van Rossum ::: Born: January 31, 1956; Occupation: Computer programmer;
|
Andrew S. Tanenbaum ::: Born: March 16, 1944; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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Stephen Wolfram ::: Born: August 29, 1959; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
Alex Pentland ::: Born: 1952; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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Stuart J. Russell ::: Born: 1962; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
Andy Hertzfeld ::: Born: April 6, 1953; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
Grace Hopper ::: Born: December 9, 1906; Died: January 1, 1992; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
Subhash Kak ::: Born: March 26, 1947; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
|
Donald Knuth ::: Born: January 10, 1938; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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Tim Berners-Lee ::: Born: June 8, 1955; Occupation: Computer Scientist;
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https://itlaw.wikia.org/wiki/Computer_system
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https://itlaw.wikia.org/wiki/Information_Security:_Computer_Hacker_Information_Available_on_the_Internet
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https://web.archive.org/web/20140728132544/http://community.wikia.com/wiki/Template:computersfooter/base
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https://web.archive.org/web/20140728132544/http://computer.wikia.com/wiki/Main_Page
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http://zh.computers.wikia.com/
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http://malankazlev.com/kheper/resources/computers/webediting/index.html -- 0
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http://malankazlev.com/resources/computers/webediting/index.html -- 0
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Integral World - When Computers Become Human, A Kid's Guide to the Future of Artificial Intelligence, Kelly Lane and David Lane
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selforum - computerized fakery intrude onto our
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https://thoughtsandvisions-searle88.blogspot.com/2014/03/10-reasons-life-may-be-computer.html
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https://thoughtsandvisions-searle88.blogspot.com/2015/03/are-you-living-in-computer-simulation.html
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dedroidify.blogspot - mysteries-of-computer-from-65bc-are
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https://esotericotherworlds.blogspot.com/2013/11/ibm-supercomputer-used-to-simulate.html
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wiki.auroville - The_Old_Computer
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Psychology Wiki - Computer
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Psychology Wiki - Computer_network
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Psychology Wiki - Computer_science
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Psychology Wiki - Computer_software
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Psychology Wiki - Quantum_computer
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Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - computer-science
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Advertising/ComputerCritters
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/ComicBook/TandyComputerWhizKids
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/AnimatedFilms
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/AnimeAndManga
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/ComicBooks
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/ComicStrips
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/Literature
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/LiveActionFilms
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/LiveActionTV
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/MagicAdventuresOfMumfie
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/Music
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/MyLittlePony
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/MythAndReligion
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/OtherMedia
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/Pokemon
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/ProfessionalWrestling
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/SpongeBobSquarePants
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/TabletopGames
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/TheSimpsons
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/VideoGames
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/WebMedia
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer/WesternAnimation
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Creator/SonyComputerEntertainment
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Creator/TheComputerFilmCompany
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Film/ComputerChess
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Film/TheComputerWoreTennisShoes
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Laconic/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Literature/ComputerCrimesAndCapers
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/BeepingComputers
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/BrainComputerInterface
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ComputerEqualsMonitor
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ComputerEqualsTapeDrive
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ComputerGeneratedImages
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ComputerizedJudicialSystem
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ComputersAreFast
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ComputersSpeakBinary
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ComputerVirus
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ComputerVoice
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CowboyBeBopAtHisComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CowboyBebopAtHIsComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/FauxComputerCode
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/HomeComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/InsideAComputerSystem
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/MagicalComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/MasterComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheAllegedComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheComputerIsACheatingBastard
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheComputerIsaCheatingBastard
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheComputerIsALyingBastard
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheComputerIsYourFriend
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheComputerShallTauntYou
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Music/ComputerWorld
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Music/OKComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Quotes/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/UsefulNotes/Atari8BitComputers
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/UsefulNotes/ColorComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/UsefulNotes/ComputerWars
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/UsefulNotes/IBMPersonalComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/UsefulNotes/MainframesAndMinicomputers
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/VideoExamples/CowboyBebopAtHisComputer
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/VideoGame/ComputerSpace
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/VideoGame/FridayThe13thTheComputerGame
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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Videogame/FridayThe13thTheComputerGame
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http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Tropers/Computergal
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http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Tropers/ComputerSherpa
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http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Tropers/HappyComputerist
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http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Tropers/NerdAtComputer
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http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Tropers/Supercomputer276
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Category:Computer_science
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Category:Computer_scientists
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Category:Computer_scientists_from_Canada
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Category:Computer_scientists_from_the_United_States
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Computer
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Computer_games
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Computers
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Computer_science
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Computer_scientist
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Computer_system
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/File:Bundesarchiv_B_145_Bild-F077869-0042,_Jugend-Computerschule_mit_IBM-PC.jpg
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/File:Charles_Babbage_Difference_Engine_No._2_Computer_History_Museum_in_Mountian_View_California.jpg
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/File:Consoles-computerspielemuseum.jpg
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/File:Personal_Computer_774.JPG
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/File:RS_Chess_Computer.JPG
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/File:Students_taking_computerized_exam.jpg
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https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_McCarthy_(computer_scientist)
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Freakazoid! (1995 - 1997) - Dexter Douglas recives the Pinnacle chip as a gift. While away from his computer after installing the chip, his cat walks across his keyboard, entering in a code that if followed by hitting the delete key will suck in and transform the user, creating Freakazoid, a bumbling blue-skinned super hero we...
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ReBoot (1994 - 2001) - Deep inside your computer lies a virtual world where cities inhabited by Sprites and Binomes. Normally, they'd live peacefully, but The User (from their perspective, a god-like figure) of their systems tests their mettle by sending Games into the system. Only the most elite should enter a game, and...
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Superhuman Samurai Syber-Squad (1994 - 1994) - Based on a show from Japan called Grid Man, the English version lasted a few more episodes. The story revolves around Sam Collins, a highschool student with a knack for programming games who gets sucked into his computer by some freak power surge, transforming into one of his own creations: Servo....
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or computers nowadays. The shows episodes were around an hour and, most of the time, featured a two-tier story. A...
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Stickin' Around (1996 - 1999) - Winner of the 1998 Gemini Award for Best Animated Series, Stickin' Around uses the advanced computer graphics of "Boiler Paint," virtually convincing us that kids are creating their own animated series. Follow best friends Stacy and Bradley as they navigate their way through their elementary school...
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Jem (1985 - 1988) - Jem & the Holograms. Jerrica Benton inherits half of her father's company, Starlight music. Eric Raymond has the other half. Eric wants to exploit Starlight topromote "The Misfits" Jerrica can't do anything until she discovers synergi. synergi is a computer her father invented. She projects lif...
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Silver Spoons (1982 - 1987) - Edward Stratton III likes Pac-Man, pinball machines and electric trains. Ricky Stratton is mature, sensible and understands computers. But Edward is in his 30s, while son Ricky is only 12. Edward is very rich. He also talks like Goofy, has the brains of a speed bump and lives in a mansion furnished...
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Street Hawk (1985 - 1985) - When Jessie Mach is crippled after an assault by an old enemy, his position as motorcycle cop seems finished. That was before a computer technician named Tuttle recruits him for a special government project. He is to be the test pilot for the Street Hawk, an advanced motorcycle that carried tremendo...
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New Monkees (1987 - 1988) - The "New Monkees" lived in a strange mansion with a mysterious butler and a sassy computer! Unlike the television show "The Monkees", which revolved around a central narrative plot, "New Monkees" television show was more of a variety show with music, short films and 'spoof' commercials. Although s...
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Classic Concentration (1987 - 1991) - Classic Concentration is the third edition the game of puzzles and prizes which began back in 1958 on NBC's daytime line-up. The original version featured a mechanical board of 30 numbered squares which rotated with the number called (as did the syndicated show of 1973-78); Classic had a computer-ge...
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Urusei Yatsura (1981 - 1986) - The Oni, a mysterious race of aliens resembling mythological Japanese demons, come to Earth intending simply to invade and take over. Represented by their leader Invader, he tells the people of Earth that they have but one chanceIf Ataru Moroboshi, a teenage boy chosen randomly by a computer as Ear...
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Cyberchase (2002 - Current) - One day, three children from Earth named Matt, Jackie, and Inez are called to the land of Cyberspace by Motherboard, its guardian, to defend her from a virus as unleashed by a villain named Hacker. Motherboard is the guardian of Cyberspace, a dimension where computer networks exist as physical locat...
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Time Trax (1993 - 1994) - Each week Darian Lambert searches out criminals from the future hiding out in our time. He is armed with a credit card that houses a powerful computer which helps holographic image Darian search out threats to the present.
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What's Happening Now!! (1985 - 1988) - This sitcom is the follow-up to the popular ABC series in the 70's. Raj is newly married and trying to write while his two buddies, Rerun and Dwayne are sharing a bachelor apartment. Rerun is working as a used car salesman while Dwayne is a computer programmer. This syndicated program was on the air...
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The Pretender (1996 - 2012) - Jarod is a Pretender - a genius whose exceptional intelligence allows him to assume various identities at will. Taken from his parents at an early age, Jarod was brought up in the Centre, a think-tank facility where he believed his computer-like mind was being used to benefit mankind. But when he...
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Amazing Animals (1997 - 1999) - Henry the computer animated gecko shows all kinds of different animals on this Disney show.
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Wing Commander Academy (1996 - 1997) - Based on the Electronic Arts computer games this series follows the adventures of a group of space cadets on the Terran carrier Tiger's Claw in the war against the Kilrathi. Featured the voices of Mark Hamill, Malcolm McDowell, Thomas F. Wilson and Dana Delany
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C.L.Y.D.E. (1990 - 1990) - CLYDE (Computer Linked Yield Driven Entity) was an alien computer banished from another planet when he developed a virus called a sense of humour. Finding his way to earth, he was discovered by siblings Matt (age 12) and Samantha (age 10) who hooked him up to an old juke box. The juke box came to li...
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Man from Atlantis (1977 - 1977) - Show was a science fiction / adventure series about a "man" who was found unconscious on a beach. "Man" may not be the best term for him, however, as his hands and feet were "webbed" between his fingers and his toes! Doctor Elizabeth Merrill "nursed" him back to health and her agency's computer gues...
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Denkou Choujin Gridman (1993 - 1993) - Three friends, Naoto, Yuuka, and Ippei have put together their own Personal Computer. The same day that the trio makes this computer, their classmate Takeshi Todo, a lonely rich boy who loves playing monster-creating PC Games, is met by the evil Kahn Digifer, a psychotic being living within the "Com...
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Whiz Kids (1983 - 1984) - Richie, Ham, Jeremy and Alice are teenagers living outside Los Angeles. They are also computer hackers who worked as amateur detectives in their spare time. Llewellen Farley is a reporter who is a source for the kids and sometimes asks them for help on stories he is writing. Farley's brother-in-law...
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Play with Me Sesame (2002 - 2007) - Play with Me Sesame is a spinoff of Sesame Street produced by and for Noggin. (Back in 2002, Noggin was co-owned by Sesame Workshop and Nickelodeon.) The show is an interactive series featuring Ernie, Bert, Grover, and Prairie Dawn. Every episode has regular segments including Bert's Computer, Ernie...
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Bailey Kipper's P.O.V (1996 - 1996) - This show ran on CBS for one year and was about a young kid living in his parent's house who secretly rigged up a sophisticated computer system that would video record happenings all around his house through the use of eyeball-shaped hidden cameras. He was supplied equipment by his father who worke...
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Monster Squad (1976 - 1977) - Monster Squad was a television series that aired on NBC from 1976-1977. The series starred Fred Grandy (who also starred in The Love Boat) as Walt, a criminology student working as a night watchman in a wax museum. To pass the time, Walt built a prototype "Crime Computer" in a mummy case near an exh...
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Hypernauts (1995 - 1996) - Hypernauts was a proof of concept show made by Foundation Imaging. To further prove that the computer-generated imagery and visual effects created in Babylon 5 were easily applied to other venues, the Hypernauts were born. ABC purchased thirteen episodes of the show from DIC Entertainment, eight of...
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Department S (1969 - 1970) - Jason King, best selling crime novellist, Stuart Sullivan, daring action man, Annabelle Hurst, computer expert. Challenged by the impossible, fuelled by justice and entwined by intrigue, Department S investigates Interpols most unsolvable cases.
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Van-pires (1997 - 1997) - The show was about a group of teenagers who would go to their headquarters which was located in a junkyard and use magic powers or something to turn into cars so that they could fight some evil car vampires,hahahahaha this show was pretty much power rangers with cheesy computer animation and even ch...
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Blue Comet SPT Layzner (1985 - 1986) - The SPT Lazner is a super-powered, computerized Tracer robot. It is the strongest robot in the universe. The story's hero, Eiji, is the child of an earthman and an alien from another planet. He happens to find out about a conspiracy to destroy the earth. Using Lazner and with his friends help, Eiji...
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The Little Rascals (Cartoon series) (1982 - 1984) - The series aired originally aired on ABC and was set in the California town of Greenpoint, supposedly in the early-1980s, with references to rock music, computers, television, and push-button traffic controls.
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Jakers! The Adventures of Piggley Winks (2003 - 2007) - "Jakers! The Adventures of Piggley Winks (or "Jakers!" in Europe)" is an American-British computer-animated children's television series. The series was broadcast in the United States on PBS Kids from September 7, 2003 to January 24, 2007.
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My Friends Tigger & Pooh (2007 - 2011) - My Friends Tigger & Pooh Is an computer animated interactive children's television series inspired by Winnie-the-Pooh by A. A. Milne. The television series features Winnie-the-Pooh and his friends, including two new characters: a brave 6-year-old red-headed girl named Darby and her dog Buster. Altho...
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Colby's Clubhouse (1984 - 2000) - a children's television show that teaches principles from the Bible; through songs and everyday situations. The main character is Colby, an anthropomorphic computer that teaches children Christian principles and lessons. Colby has the entire Bible programmed into his memory.[1][2][3] The show was wr...
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Brats of the Lost Nebula (1998 - 1999) - (also known posthumously as Jim Henson's Brats of the Lost Nebula) is a puppet and computer animated series originally broadcast on the Kids' WB block of Saturday morning programming in 1998. Created by Dan Clark, the sci-fi series for kids used puppets from Jim Henson's Creature Shop and state of t...
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Top Wing (2017 - Current) - a Canadian computer-animated television series created by Matthew Fernandes of Industrial Brothers and produced by Industrial Brothers and 9 Story Media Group. It premiered on Nickelodeonin the United States on November 6, 2017, and debuted on Treehouse in Canada on January 6, 2018.[2] In the UK, th...
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Barbie: Life in the Dreamhouse (2012 - 2015) - an online web series of computer-animated shorts produced by Arc Productions, Mattel and Resnick Interactive Group.[1] The series debuted in May 11, 2012 and is available on Barbie.com, Netflix and YouTube.[2] Two TV specials aired on Nickelodeon on September 1, 2013.[3] The series ended on November...
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Super Sonico (2014 - Current) - a fictional female character created by Tsuji Santa for the Japanese computer and video game software company Nitroplus, first appearing as a mascot for a Nitroplus-sponsored music festival in 2006. Nitroplus has since developed the character into a media franchise that includes music products, mang...
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Puppy Dog Pals (2017 - 2018) - previously titled Puppy Dog Tails[2]) is an American computer-animated children's television series created by Harland Williams. The series debuted on Disney Junior and Disney Channel in the United States on April 14, 2017.[3] On August 24, 2017, Disney Junior renewed the series for a second season,...
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Mickey and the Roadster Racers (2017 - 2018) - an American computer-animated children's television series produced by Disney Television Animation. It is a spin-off of Mickey Mouse Clubhouse. The series debuted on Disney Junior and Disney Channel in the United States on January 15, 2017.Mickey and the Roadster Racers is about the Sensational Six...
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Vampirina (2017 - Current) - a computer-animated Halloween fantasy musical children's television series that premiered on Disney Junior on October 1, 2017. The show is based on the Vampirina Ballerina series of books written by Anne Marie Pace and illustrated by LeUyen Pham, published by Disney-Hyperion. Disney Junior announced...
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The Bears' Island (1992 - 1992) - The Bear's Island (L'le Aux Ours) is a French animated television series produced by Pixibox and first aired in 1992. It was one of the first animated films which heavily involved computer animation.
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Galactik Football (2006 - 2011) - French animated television series produced by Gaumont Alphanim that mixes conventional 2D animation with 3D computer graphics.
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Gaither's Pond (1997 - 2006) - Gaither's Pond is a Christian computer animated children's series created by Benjy, Bill, and Gloria Gaither and produced by Live Bait Productions. It currently airs on KTV.
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Virus Buster Serge (1997 - 1997) - Neo Hong Kong, 2097: The world has changed. Advances in genetic engineering and cybernetics have created an environment full of artificially enhanced humans and intelligent super-computers that operate using biological software. But the same technology that has allowed man and machine to merge has m...
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Sid the Science Kid (2008 - 2013) - (also known as Jim Henson's Sid the Science Kid) is an American half-hour CGI animated series that aired on PBS Kids from September 1, 2008 to March 25, 2013, with a total of 68 half-hour episodes produced over two seasons. The computer generated show is produced by The Jim Henson Company and then-P...
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Computer Chronicles (1983 - 2002) - Computer Chronicles was an American half-hour television series, broadcast from 1983 to 2002 on Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) public television, which documented the rise of the personal computer from its infancy to the immense market at the turn of the 21st century. The show was created by Stew...
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Sonic Boom (2014 - 2018) - a computer-animated children's television series, produced by Sega of America, Inc. and Technicolor Animation Productions in collaboration with Lagardre Thmatiques and Jeunesse TV, respectively for Cartoon Network, Canal J, and Gulli. Based on the video game franchise Sonic the Hedgehog created by...
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Bratz (2005 - 2008) - a computer animated television series based on a line of toy dolls of the same name. It is produced by Mike Young Productions, MGA Entertainment, and Lionsgate Television, and premiered on Cartoon Network and 4Kids TV. The show aired from September 10, 2005 to October 14, 2006. In 2008, the show was...
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V R 5 (1995 - 1995) - Sydney Bloom is a beautiful lines-woman working for a local telephone company. Despite this, Sydney lives an almost solitary lives with no one around her but her childhood best friend, Duncan, and a few of her personal computers that she occasionally use to access virtual reality worlds. After accid...
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Colby's Clubhouse (1995 - 2012) - Colby's Clubhouse was a children's television show that taught principles from the Bible through songs and everyday situations. It was written and produced by Peter and Hanneke Jacobs. Peter Jacobs played the part of Colby the Computer. It originally aired from 1987 to 2000 with several changes of c...
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PC4U (1996 - 1997) - The Weekly Educational Show hosted By Kids Natalie Gauci and Nicolas Romney. Explore the Computer's Functions, Helpful Internet Websites, latest CD-ROM releases, A look into the Business World, go Behind the Scenes, and much much more.
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Game Over (2004 - 2004) - Game Over is an American computer-animated television series created by David Sacks, produced by Carsey-Werner Productions, and broadcast on UPN in 2004. It was canceled after six episodes due to weak ratings.
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Dweebs (1995 - 1995) - This comedy was about an office manager that works for a giant computer software company who teaches her reclusive boss and his nerdy employees how to communicate better. The show was aired friday @ 8:00PM on CBS
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Bruno the Kid (1996 - 1997) - Bruno (voiced by Bruce Willis) an 11-year old boy becomes a spy for a secret organization named Globe who contact him by computer and a special watch and are unaware of his age (his avatar is of Bruce Willis). Jarlesburg and Harris (supplies gadgets like Q in James Bond) do not know that Globe are u...
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Games World (1993 - 1998) - Games World was a British computer games-based television programme, made by Hewland International and broadcast on Sky One each weekday from 1993-1998. The overall concept of Games World was quite similar to Hewland International's GamesMaster (1992-98), which was shown every week on Channel 4 and...
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Sid the Science Kid (2008 - 2013) - Sid the Science Kid is a half-hour PBS Kids series that debuted on September 1, 2008. The computer generated show is produced by The Jim Henson Company and then-PBS member KCET in Los Angeles, California using the Henson Digital Puppetry Studio. The show is produced by motion capture which allows pu...
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Pirates: Adventures in Art (2009 - 2012) - An American/Canadian computer-animated children's television show produced by DHX Media and WTTW Chicago. In 2009 it premiered on PBS Kids in USA. Reruns aired on Qubo in 2018.
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Twipsy (1999 - 2000) - The basic premise tells of a boy named Nick who accidentally gets transported to cyberspace through his friend's computer game where he meets Twipsy.
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3-2-1 Penguins! (2000 - 2008) - 3-2-1 Penguins! is a sci-fi computer-animated children's television series, initially launched on November 14, 2000 as a direct-to-video episode.[1] The series was originally produced direct-to-video similar to the Big Idea Entertainment's flagship title, VeggieTales, with videos released between 20...
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Butt-Ugly Martians (2001 - 2003) - Butt-Ugly Martians is a computer-animated television series produced by the British media group Just Entertainment in association with Mike Young Productions and DCDC Limited. The plot of the series begins when the Butt-Ugly Martians (B.U.M.) are forced to invade planets for the evil Emperor Bog, bu...
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Pingu in the City (2017 - 2019) - Pingu in the City (Japanese: in Hepburn: Ping in za Shiti) is a Japanese computer-animated television series produced by Polygon Pictures and Dandelion Animation Studios in collaboration with Mattel Creations.
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The Beeps (2007 - 2008) - The Beeps is an animated pre-school children's television series of 65 x 11-minute episodes, produced by Impossible TV Limited using computer-generated imagery CGI for the United Kingdom television network, Channel Five Broadcasting Ltd.
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Home Alone 3(1997) - Harry (Joe Pesci) And Marv (Daniel Stern) Acquire A Missile Guidance System Computer Chip And Smuggle It Through An Airport Inside A Remote Controlled Toy Car, Because Of Baggage Confusion, Kate (Catherine O'Hara) Gets The Toy Car, She Gives It To Kevin McCallister (Macaulay Culkin) Just Before Harr...
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Tron(1982) - Computer Classic, one of the first computer generated movies. A hacker is split into molecules and is transported into a computer. In this computer a mean program called Master Control behaves like a dictator. The hacker, who programmed a number of features of the environment he got into, teams up w...
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Office Space(1999) - Peter Gibbons is a typical corporate everyman that hates his job and his life. He works for Innotech updating computer software for the new millennium amongst a sea of cubicles. He eats lunch at the same restaurant everyday, drives a mid-size car and lives in a duplex with walls so thin that he ca...
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Alien(1979) - An ore processing barge called the Nostromo recieves an unknown alien message, and the onboard computer wakes the crew to investigate. The crew investigates, finding an abandoned alient spacecraft filled with strange eggs. One of the eggs hatches, attaching a parasite to a crewmember, who is taken...
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Batman Forever(1995) - The Dark Knight of Gotham City confronts a dastardly duo: Two-Face and the Riddler. Formerly District Attorney Harvey Dent, Two-Face believes Batman caused the courtroom accident which left him disfigured on one side. And Edward Nygma, computer-genius and former employee of millionaire Bruce Wayne,...
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The Terminator(1984) - In the year 2029, super computers dominate the world, with only one intention, the extermination of the human race. They send an indestructible human-like cyborg, called a terminator, back in time to kill Sarah Connor whose unborn child will eventually become mankind
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Camp Nowhere(1994) - A highly entertaining movie starring Christopher Lloyd, Andrew Keegan and Johnathan Jackson. Four intelligent, smart-mouthed attractive kids from the suburbs are sick and tired of being forced by their parents to attend lame camps such as fat camp, military camp, acting camp and computer camp during...
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Digimon: The Movie(2000) - While some children spend their summer vacation playing ball or going to the beach, seven kids use their free time to help save the world in this feature-length animated adventure adapted from the popular television series. While attending summer camp, a group of kids playing with computers are tran...
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101 Dalmatians(1996) - There are more puppies than you can shake a rolled up newspaper at in this live-action remake of the Disney animated favorite 101 Dalmatians. Roger (Jeff Daniels) is a designer of computer games who shares his home with his pet dalmatian, Pongo. One day, Roger takes Pongo for a walk in the park and...
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The Matrix(1999) - In the distant future, a computer hacker named Neo discovers that what we think is reality is actually a computerized image planted in our minds. The real world is run by machines that use human bodies as batteries, and place the human's minds into an alternate reality, a reality knows as The Matrix...
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Twister(1996) - Bill Paxton, Helen Hunt, and Carey Elwes may be billed as the stars of Twister, but the film's real attractions are the tornadoes themselves. Best experienced in a theater, the nail-biting blow-the-audience-out-of-their-seats computer generated graphics, cutting edge sound, and other special effects...
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The Iron Giant(1999) - The Iron Giant is a 1999 American animated science fiction film using both traditional animation and computer animation, produced by Warner Bros. Animation, and based on the 1968 novel The Iron Man by Ted Hughes. The film was directed by Brad Bird, scripted by Tim McCanlies, and stars Jennifer Anist...
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RocketMan(1997) - Fred Randall, a bumbling computer nerd, is picked as a last-minute replacement for the first manned mission to Mars. He soon becomes NASA's worst nightmare. A very hillarious movie that will have you on the floor laughing.
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Hackers(1995) - A young boy is arrested by the US Secret Service for writing a computer virus and is banned from using a computer until his 18th birthday. Years later, he and his new-found friends discover a plot to unleash a dangerous computer virus, but they must use their computer skills to find the evidence whi...
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Superman III(1983) - Gus Gorman, Newly Trained As A Computer Whiz, Start's Working For A Conglomerate Run By The Corporate Nemesis Ross Webster, Intent On World Domination, He Is Then Sent To Smallville To Wipe Out Columbia's Coffee Crop By Fiddling With The Computer Side Of A Weather Satellite, Clark Kent Is In Town Fo...
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2010: The Year We Make Contact(1984) - In the year 2001, Dave Bowman was taken by the Jupiter monolith and transformed into a powerful being. Now, in the year 2010, Dr. Heywood Floyd, the man held responsible for Discovery's failure, is going to Jupiter. He and his crewmates must reactivate the psychotic HAL-9000 computer, so they may le...
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Ragewar(1985) - A computer programmer/enthusiast Paul Bradford (Jeffery Byron), and his girlfriend Gwen (Leslie Wing), get sucked into another world where a sorcerer named Mestema, known as "The Dungeonmaster" (Richard Moll), has them interact in seven different scenarios/riddles to see who can survive. They must f...
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Sidekicks(1992) - Barry is an asthmatic kid having trouble in life. He lives with his father, a computer programmer, in Texas. Barry is struggling to get by in life, dealing with his rough school life, bullies, as well as his health. Barry's only source of enjoyment is fantasizing that he is with Chuck Norris. Barry...
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War Games(1983) - A young computer whizz kid hacks into a top secret military super-computer called WOPR through a "back door" which has complete control over the U.S. nuclear arsenal. A range of choices of games comes up. He chooses Global Thermonuclear warfare It challenges him to a game between America and Russia...
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Brainscan(1994) - A lonely teenage horror-movie fan discovers a mysterious computer game that uses hypnosis to custom-tailor the game into the most terrifying experience imaginable. When he emerges from the hypnotic trance he is horrified to find evidence that the brutal murder depicted in the game actually happened...
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Crash and Burn(1990) - In this follow-up to its predecessor Robot Jox, Unicom is a powerful organization overseeing most of the world after its economic collapse. They have banned computers and robots in an attempt to insure "life, liberty, and the pursuit of economic stability". When a Unicom Synth robot infiltrates a so...
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3 Ninjas: High Noon at Mega Mountain(1998) - Three young boys, Rocky, Colt and Tum Tum together with their neighbor girl, computer whiz Amanda are visiting Mega Mountain amusement park when it is invaded by an army of ninjas led by evil Medusa, who wants to take over the park and hold the owners for ransom. Kids and retired TV star Dave Dragon...
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Electric Dreams(1984) - Electric Dreams is a 1984 movie set in San Francisco, California that depicts a love triangle between a man, a woman, and a home computer. It stars Lenny Von Dohlen, Virginia Madsen and Bud Cort (voice) and was directed by Stev
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Colossus: The Forbin Project(1970) - "We built a super computer with a mind of its own and now we must fight it for the world
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Goldeneye(1995) - Bond, while on holiday, meets the beautiful but deadly Xenia Onatopp, a member of a Russia mafia group and attempts to stop Xenia and another person taking the 'Tiger' helicopter, a new design and protected against any form of jamming. Meanwhile, Natalya Siminova, a Russian computer programmer is sh...
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Airplane II: The Sequel(1982) - Years have passed since Ted Striker heroically saved many lives by avoiding a plane crash. Working as a test pilot for a new Lunar Shuttle (the XR-2200, not to be confused with the XR-2300), he gets innocently sent into a mental ward after a crash of the badly constructed, computer-navigated spacesh...
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The Net(1995) - Angela Bennett is a freelance software engineer who lives in a world of computer technology. When a cyber friend asks Bennett to debug a CD-ROM game, she discovers a conspiracy that will turn her life upside down. Soon, her records have been erased, and she's been given a new identity and a police r...
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The Lawnmower Man(1992) - Loosely based on a short story by Stephen King, The Lawnmower Man was the first film to explore virtual reality technology and boasts a dazzling collection of computer-animated sequences. The story concerns the slightly-mad scientist Dr. Lawrence Angelo (Pierce Brosnan), who as part of a secret gove...
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Nirvana(1997) - A computer virus endows Solo, the hero of a virtual reality game, with human consciousness thereby creating all kinds of headaches for his creator Jimi. The trouble begins in the futuristic metropolis of Northern Agglomerate three days before Christmas. With little time left, video-game designer Jim...
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Fortress(1993) - Elements of Orwellian science-fiction and old-fashioned prison dramas are combined in this futuristic action film, as an unjustly imprisoned couple attempts to escape from a high-tech jail known as The Fortress. The Fortress is the tool of a repressive government, an imposing, computerized hell, fea...
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Virtuosity(1995) - In a futuristic, high-tech world run by huge corporations, Parker Barnes (Denzel Washington) is an L.A. policeman serving time for killing the psychotic who murdered his wife and child. Lindenmeyer (Stephen Spinella), a Dr. Frankenstein of the computer era, has created a monster, Sid 6.7 (Russell Cr...
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Police Academy 7: Mission to Moscow(1994) - In a major stumbling block toward better international relations, America's most laughable police officers are sent to Russia to fight crime in this comedy. In Moscow, master criminal Konali (Ron Perlman) has marketed a new computer game that has an unusual hidden featureit allows him to bring down...
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Fled(1996) - Though serving a prison sentence for using his computer to embezzle from an international corporation, Dodge (Stephen Baldwin) still thinks of himself as an ordinary criminal. His fellow convict, Piper (Lawrence Fishburne), whose basic decency leads him to protect Dodge from an assault by another pr...
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The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes(1969) - Some college students manage to persuade the town's big businessman, A. J. Arno, to donate a computer to their college. When the problem- student, Dexter Riley, tries to fix the computer, he gets an electric shock and his brain turns to a computer; now he remembers everything he reads. Unfortunately...
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Ghost In The Machine(1993) - A serial killer is tranformed into a computer virus out to destroy more than your hard drive in this sci-fi thriller. Terry Munroe (Karen Allen), a single mother, is looking for a gift for her boss and visits a computer store, where one of the employees demonstrates a hand-held scanner than can tran...
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New World Disorder(1999) - In this high-tech thriller, David Marx (Rutger Hauer), a take-no-prisoners homicide detective, is teamed with computer expert Kris Paddock (Tara Fitzgerald) to track down Kurt Bishop (Andrew McCarthy), a software pirate who has been trying to steal a valuable encryption security program. Bishop will...
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Disclosure(1994) - A computer specialist is sued for sexual harassment by a former lover turned boss who initiated the act forcefully, which threatens both his career and his personal life.
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The Double O Kid(1992) - Lance, a teenager, dreams to be a secret agent when he is suddenly in the middle of an hacker intrigue which aims at an international environmental congress. Lance gets in possession of a computer access card one of which the hackers are in urgent need of for their operation. Lance begins to play wi...
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Jumpin' Jack Flash(1986) - Terry works for a bank, and uses computers to communicate with clients all over the world. One day she gets a strange message from an unknown source. The message is coded. After decoding the message, Terry becomes embroiled in an espionage ring. People are killed, and Terry is chased. Throughout she...
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Demon Seed(1977) - Susan Harris (Julie Christie) is in a troubled marriage with Alex (Fritz Weaver), a scientist. When Alex moves out of their luxurious home, which is run by the super computer "Proteus" that Alex created, Susan becomes trapped by "Proteus", who is becoming more powerful by the day. Locked in her ho...
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Drop Zone(1994) - A team of skydiving crooks led by DEA-agent-turned-bad Busey specialize in landing on police roofs and breaking in so their evil computer nerd can steal undercover agents' files and sell them to drug lords. Federal Marshal Snipes lost a brother to this crew and learns skydiving with the help of toug...
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Lewis & Clark & George(1997) - Three makes for a dangerous crowd in this darkly comic crime story. Convicted murderer Lewis (Salvator Xuereb) breaks out of prison with Clark (Dan Gunther), who is doing time for computer fraud. The escapees are heading to New Mexico in search of a secret map to a gold mine that was hidden by a pri...
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After Hours(1985) - Aaah, New York City in the 80s. Sleaze, crime, depravity...It was wonderful, wasn't it? A young man named Paul Hackett (Griffin Dunne) is about to be plunged into the maelstrom of the city in 1985. A computer processor with a dull life, Hackett visits a coffee shop one night and meets a young woman...
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ThrillKill(1984) - Karlie (Diana Reis)is a computer programmer who hacks into bank accounts and amasses a fortune of 5 million dollars.The company Karlie works for wants the money so they have her killed.Karlie's stewardess sister Bobbi(Gina Massey) teams up with a detective(Robin Ward) to find Karlie's killer and the...
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The Tower(1993) - A man(Paul Reiser) working in a building, that is totally computer operated ,accidentally damages his pass key. He tries to re-enter the pass key ,but the computer see the man as a threat and tries to eliminate him.
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Rudolph & the Island of Misfit Toys(2001) - Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and the Island of Misfit Toys is a 2001 American-Canadian Christmas computer-animated musical film directed by Bill Kowalchuk for GoodTimes Entertainment. It was released on video and DVD on October 30, 2001. The film revisits classic characters like Hermey the Elf (no...
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The LEGO Movie(2014) - The Lego Movie (stylized as The LEGO Movie) is a 2014 computer-animated/live-action film adventure-comedy film directed and co-written by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, and starring the voices of Chris Pratt, Will Ferrell, Elizabeth Banks, Will Arnett, Nick O...
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2001: A Space Odyssey(1968) - When humanity discovers a mysterious monolithic object beneath the surface of Earth's moon, a group of astronauts set off on a lunar quest with the artificially intelligent computer HAL 9000, who will stop at nothing to ensure the mission is completed... even if it means some or all of the crew will...
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Hunk(1987) - A computer nerd makes a deal with the Devil and gets a new, "beefcake" body.
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Star Wars: The Clone Wars(2008) - Star Wars: The Clone Wars is a 2008 American computer-animated military science fiction-space opera action film that takes place within the Star Wars saga, leading into the TV series of the same name produced by Lucasfilm. The film is set during the three-year time period between the films Attack of...
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Tinker Bell(2008) - Tinker Bell is a 2008 computer animated film and the first installment in the Disney Fairies franchise produced by DisneyToon Studios. It revolves around Tinker Bell, a fairy character created by J. M. Barrie in his play Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up, and featured in the 1953 Disney ani...
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Arthur Christmas(2011) - Arthur Christmas is a 2011 British-American 3D computer animated Christmas comedy film, produced by Aardman Animations and Sony Pictures Animation as their first collaborative project. The film was released on November 11, 2011 in the UK, and on November 23, 2011 in th
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Prep & Landing(2009) - Prep & Landing is a computer animated television special, based on an idea by Chris Williams at Walt Disney Animation Studios and developed by Kevin Deters and Stevie Wermers-Skelton into a half-hour Christmas special. It first aired December 8, 2009 o
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Hop(2011) - Hop is a 2011 American 3D live-action/computer-animated fantasy comedy film produced by Illumination Entertainment and released by Universal Pictures, directed by Tim Hill and produced by Chris Meledandri and Michele Imperato Stabile. Hop stars Russell Brand as E.B., the Easter Bunny (Hugh Laurie)'s...
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The Iron Giant(1999) - The Iron Giant is a 1999 American animated science fiction film using both traditional animation and computer animation, produced by Warner Bros. Feature Animation and directed by Brad Bird in his directorial debut. It is based on the 1968 novel The Iron Man by Ted Hughes (which was published in the...
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Ghost in the Shell 2.0(2008) - Mamoru Oshii's first Ghost in the Shell cyberspace film will return to five Japanese theaters in an enhanced Ghost in the Shell 2.0 edition on July 12. The new edition will include new computer graphics and digital effects for some scenes and a reunion of most of the cast members for a new 6.1 surro...
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The Curious Female(1970) - In the year 2177, the world is under the control of a master computer. For recreation, however, people are allowed to view sex tapes.
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The Smurfs(2011) - The Smurfs is a 2011 American 3D live-action/computer-animated comedy film loosely based on the comics series of the same name created by the Belgian comics artist Peyo. It was directed by Raja Gosnell and stars Neil Patrick Harris, Jayma Mays, Sofa Vergara, and Hank Azaria, with the voices of Jona...
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Chosen Survivors(1974) - A group of diverse individuals are suddenly taken from their homes and flown via helicopter to a futuristic bomb shelter in the desert, nearly two miles below the surface of the Earth. There they learn that a nuclear holocaust is taking place and that they've been "chosen" by computer to survive in...
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The Invisible Boy(1957) - A ten-year-old boy and Robby the Robot team up to prevent a Super Computer from controlling the Earth from a satellite.
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Evilspeak(1981) - A military cadet who happens to be a social outcast taps into a way to summon demons and cast spells on his tormentors through his computer.
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Paws(1997) - A boy as well as a dog attempt to stop a bad woman from getting her hands on a computer disc that has pointers as to the whereabouts of a hidden fortune of $1 million dollars.
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Where the Wild Things Are(2009) - Where the Wild Things Are is a 2009 fantasy drama film directed by Spike Jonze and adapted from Maurice Sendak's 1963 children's book Where the Wild Things Are. It combines live action, performers in costumes, animatronics, and computer-generated imagery (CGI). The film stars Max Records, and featur...
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Resident Evil(2002) - A special military unit fights a powerful, out-of-control supercomputer and hundreds of scientists who have mutated into flesh-eating creatures after a laboratory accident.
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Moon(2009) - Astronaut Sam Bell has a quintessentially personal encounter toward the end of his three-year stint on the Moon, where he, working alongside his computer, GERTY, sends back to Earth parcels of a resource that has helped diminish our planet's power problems.
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The Dallas Connection(1994) - Assassins led by Black Widow are out to kill Antonio Morales to prevent him from handing a computer chip over to IWAR headquarters. It's up to secret agents Chris Cannon, Mark Austin, and Samantha Maxx to stop them.
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L.E.T.H.A.L. Ladies: Return to Savage Beach(1998) - A stolen computer disk contains the location of a hidden tresaure trove. It's up to the sexy ladies of LETHAL (Legion to Ensure Total Harmony and Law) to find the treasure before the bad guys do. Will the forces of evil be able to overcome LETHAL's powerful combination of bullets, brains, and boobs?
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TMNT(2007) - TMNT is a 2007 American computer-animated action film based on the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (TMNT) franchise. The film is the fourth and final installment in the original film series. It was the first Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles film made with computer-generated imagery (CGI), created by Imagi...
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X2(2003) - The X-Men Are Against The Genocidal William Stryker Who Leads An Assault On Professor Xavier's School Of Mutants To Build His Own Version Of Professor Xavier's Mutant Tracking Computer Cerebro In Order To Destroy Every Mutant On Earth.
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Antitrust(2001) - A computer programmer's dream job at a hot Portland-based firm turns nightmarish when he discovers his boss has a secret and ruthless means of dispatching anti-trust problems.
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Dinosaur(2000) - The very first film Walt Disney film to be entirely computer-animated. The film used computer-animated characters on live-action backgrounds and was Disney's most expensive film to produce to date. While a dinosaur-related computer-animated film had been contemplated for over a decade, the film fina...
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The Bank(2001) - A monstrous banker takes on an econometrist as the latter has thought up a computer system that can predict the rises and falls of the stock market and thinks that they will greatly profit from it, unaware that the latter has revenge in mind for an event from his childhood which he blames on the ban...
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Crosstalk(1982) - A man investigates a suspected murder after finding what he thinks is evidence on his advanced computer of a husband murdering his wife.
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The Terminal Man(1974) - Hoping to cure his violent seizures, a man agrees to a series of experimental microcomputers inserted into his brain but inadvertently discovers that violence now triggers a pleasurable response his brain.
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The 'Human' Factor(1975) - After his family is brutally murdered for an unknown reason, a computer engineer sets out to find those responsible.
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Hotel Transylvania(2012) - Hotel Transylvania is a 2012 American computer-animated comedy film produced by Columbia Pictures and Sony Pictures Animation. The film tells the story of Count Dracula, the owner of a hotel called Hotel Transylvania where the world's monsters can take a rest from human civilization. Dracula invites...
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Hotel Transylvania 2(2015) - Hotel Transylvania 2 is a 2015 American 3D computer animated comedy film, the second installment in the Hotel Transylvania franchise and the sequel to the 2012 film Hotel Transylvania. Hotel Transylvania 2 depicts events taking place 7 years after the first film, with the hotel now open to human gue...
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Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation(2018) - Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation (released internationally as Hotel Transylvania 3: A Monster Vacation) is a 2018 American computer-animated comedy film produced by Sony Pictures Animation and distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing. In the film, Dracula finds love with a ship captain named Eric...
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Rango(2011) - Rango is a 2011 American computer-animated Western comedy film directed by Gore Verbinski from a screenplay by John Logan. The film's plot centers on Rango, a chameleon who accidentally ends up in the town of Dirt, an outpost that is in desperate need of a new sheriff. His first mission is to save t...
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Sing(2016) - Sing is a 2016 American computer-animated musical comedy film produced by Illumination Entertainment and released by Universal Pictures. It was written and directed by Garth Jennings, co-directed by Christophe Lourdelet and stars the ensemble voices of Matthew McConaughey, Reese Witherspoon, Seth Ma...
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The Smurfs(2011) - The Smurfs is a 2011 American 3D live-action/computer-animated comedy film loosely based on the comics series of the same name created by the Belgian comics artist Peyo. It was directed by Raja Gosnell and stars Neil Patrick Harris, Jayma Mays, Sofa Vergara, and Hank Azaria, with the voices of Jona...
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Yogi Bear(2010) - Yogi Bear is a 2010 American 3D live-action/computer-animated comedy film directed by Eric Brevig and written for the screen by Brad Copeland, Joshua Sternin and Jeffrey Ventimilia. Based on the 1961 animated television series The Yogi Bear Show and the character of the same name created by William...
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Silent Madness(1984) - After a computer glitch accidentally releases a homicidal maniac, his doctor and some hospital staff track a trail of bodies to the sorority house where the killer committed his earlier crimes.
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Space Chimps(2008) - Jeff Daniels, Stanley Tucci, Cheryl Hines, and Andy Samberg lend their voices to this computer-animated comedy following the descendants of the first chimps in space as they blast off for fun and adventure on a far-away planet. Ham III (Samberg) is the grandson of Ham, the first-ever chimp astronaut...
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https://myanimelist.net/anime/14317/Computer_Kakumei__Saikyou_x_Saisoku_no_Zunou_Tanjou -- Sci-Fi
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https://myanimelist.net/anime/3936/Personal_Computer_Travel_Tanteidan -- Kids, Adventure, Historical, Sci-Fi
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2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) ::: 8.3/10 -- G | 2h 29min | Adventure, Sci-Fi | 12 May 1968 (UK) -- After discovering a mysterious artifact buried beneath the Lunar surface, mankind sets off on a quest to find its origins with help from intelligent supercomputer H.A.L. 9000. Director: Stanley Kubrick Writers:
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23 (1998) ::: 7.3/10 -- 1h 39min | Thriller, Drama | 14 January 1999 (Germany) -- When the orphaned Karl Koch and his friend David start breaking into government and military computers, an acquaintance senses that there is money in computer cracking - and travels to east Berlin to try to contact the KGB. Director: Hans-Christian Schmid Writers: Michael Dierking, Michael Gutmann | 1 more credit
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Abstract: The Art of Design ::: TV-14 | 45min | Documentary | TV Series (2017 ) -- A look beyond blueprints and computers into the art and science of design, showcasing great designers from every discipline whose work shapes our world. Stars:
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All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace ::: 1h | Documentary | TV Mini-Series (2011) Episode Guide 3 episodes All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace Poster A series of films about how humans have been colonized by the machines we have built. Although we don't realize it, the way we see everything in the world today is through the eyes of the computers. Stars: Adam Curtis, Stewart Brand, Peder Anker
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Chobits ::: TV-14 | Animation, Comedy, Drama | TV Series (20022003) -- Hideki finds the discarded and malfunctioning Persocom Chi, a personal computer that looks like a girl. While trying to fix and care for Chi, Hideki discovers that she might be a Chobits, a robot of urban legend that has free will. Stars:
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Chuck ::: TV-14 | 43min | Action, Comedy, Drama | TV Series (20072012) -- When a twenty-something computer geek inadvertently downloads critical government secrets into his brain, the C.I.A. and the N.S.A. assign two agents to protect him and exploit such knowledge, turning his life upside down. Creators:
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Code Lyoko ::: TV-Y7 | 26min | Animation, Action, Adventure | TV Series (2003-2007) Episode Guide 97 episodes Code Lyoko Poster -- When a group of four boarding school students discover a supercomputer housed inside an abandoned factory, they find a virtual world called Lyoko and awaken a sentient multi-agent system virus that tries to take over the real world. Creator:
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Code Lyoko ::: TV-Y7 | 26min | Animation, Action, Adventure | TV Series (20032007) -- When a group of four boarding school students discover a supercomputer housed inside an abandoned factory, they find a virtual world called Lyoko and awaken a sentient multi-agent system virus that tries to take over the real world. Creator:
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Colossus: The Forbin Project (1970) ::: 7.1/10 -- M | 1h 40min | Sci-Fi, Thriller | 8 April 1970 (USA) -- Thinking this will prevent war, the US government gives an impenetrable supercomputer total control over launching nuclear missiles. But what the computer does with the power is unimaginable to its creators. Director: Joseph Sargent Writers:
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Cyberbully (2015) ::: 6.8/10 -- 1h 2min | Crime, Drama, Mystery | TV Movie 15 January 2015 -- A British teenager is forced by a computer hacker to do his bidding. If she refuses, the hacker will leak compromising photos of her to the public. Director: Ben Chanan Writers: Ben Chanan, David Lobatto Stars:
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Desk Set (1957) ::: 7.3/10 -- Approved | 1h 43min | Comedy, Romance | 2 August 1957 (West Germany) -- Two extremely strong personalities clash over the computerization of a television network's research department. Director: Walter Lang Writers: Phoebe Ephron (screenplay), Henry Ephron (screenplay) | 1 more credit
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Do You Trust This Computer? (2018) ::: 7.4/10 -- 1h 18min | Documentary | 5 April 2018 (USA) -- Artificial Intelligence: Monster or Shangri-La? Director: Chris Paine Writer: Mark Monroe
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.hack//SIGN ::: TV-14 | 25min | Animation, Action, Adventure | TV Series (2002-2003) Episode Guide 28 episodes .hack//SIGN Poster -- A strange boy named Tsukasa appears in the online video game "The World". He claims to be alive, and without a computer. Stars: Megumi Toyoguchi, Kazuhiro Nakata, Amanda Winn Lee | See full cast &
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Intelligence -- 42min | Action, Drama, Sci-Fi | TV Series (2014) ::: A high-tech intelligence operative, enhanced with a super-computer microchip in his brain, aids an elite government cyber-security agency in special missions. Creator:
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Jake 2.0 ::: 1h | Drama, Sci-Fi | TV Series (20032004) Jake Foley is a computer technician for the N.S.A., who secretly longs for a chance to work in the field. Circumstance puts him in a top secret laboratory, in the middle of a shoot-out ... S Creator: Silvio Horta Stars:
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Moneyball (2011) ::: 7.6/10 -- PG-13 | 2h 13min | Biography, Drama, Sport | 23 September 2011 (USA) -- Oakland A's general manager Billy Beane's successful attempt to assemble a baseball team on a lean budget by employing computer-generated analysis to acquire new players. Director: Bennett Miller Writers:
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Moon (2009) ::: 7.9/10 -- R | 1h 37min | Drama, Mystery, Sci-Fi | 10 July 2009 (USA) -- Astronaut Sam Bell has a quintessentially personal encounter toward the end of his three-year stint on the Moon, where he, working alongside his computer, GERTY, sends back to Earth parcels of a resource that has helped diminish our planet's power problems. Director: Duncan Jones Writers:
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Natural City (2003) ::: 5.7/10 -- Naechureol siti (original title) -- Natural City Poster In the year 2080, the world is connected by a massive computer network. Combiners have developed a process that allows them to merge the souls of human and machine/cyborg, wreaking havoc in... S Director: Byung-chun Min Writers: Jae-rim Han (screenplay adaptation), Byung-chun Min
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Psycho-Pass ::: TV-MA | 25min | Animation, Action, Crime | TV Series (2012- ) Episode Guide 41 episodes Psycho-Pass Poster -- Believing in humanity and order, policewoman Akane Tsunemori obeys the ruling, computerized, precognitive Sibyl System. But when she faces a criminal mastermind who can elude this "perfect" system, she questions both Sibyl and herself. Creator:
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ReBoot ::: TV-Y7 | 30min | Animation, Action, Adventure | TV Series (19942001) -- In the inner computer world of Mainframe, a guardian program sprite and his friends defend the system from threats from viruses and the User. Creators: Gavin Blair, John Grace, Philip Mitchell | 1 more credit
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Resident Evil (2002) ::: 6.7/10 -- R | 1h 40min | Action, Horror, Sci-Fi | 15 March 2002 (USA) -- A special military unit fights a powerful, out-of-control supercomputer and hundreds of scientists who have mutated into flesh-eating creatures after a laboratory accident. Director: Paul W.S. Anderson Writer:
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Schoolhouse Rock! ::: TV-Y | 3min | Animation, Short, Family | TV Series (19732009) -- A series of shorts illustrating various songs that teach multiplication tables, grammar, science, American history, computers, economics, and environmentalism. Stars:
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Tehran ::: TV-MA | 45min | Drama, Thriller | TV Series (2020 ) -- A Mossad agent embarks on her first mission as a computer hacker in her home town of Tehran. Creators: Dana Eden, Maor Kohn, Omri Shenhar | 2 more credits
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Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles ::: TV-PG | 1h | Action, Drama, Fantasy | TV Series (20082009) -- Set after the events in Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), Sarah Connor and her son, John, try to stay under-the-radar from the government, as they plot to destroy the computer network, Skynet, in hopes of preventing Armageddon. Creator:
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The Girl Who Played with Fire (2009) ::: 7.2/10 -- Flickan som lekte med elden (original title) -- The Girl Who Played with Fire Poster -- As computer hacker Lisbeth and journalist Mikael investigate a sex-trafficking ring, Lisbeth is accused of three murders, causing her to go on the run while Mikael works to clear her name. Director: Daniel Alfredson Writers:
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The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011) ::: 7.8/10 -- R | 2h 38min | Crime, Drama, Mystery | 21 December 2011 (USA) -- Journalist Mikael Blomkvist is aided in his search for a woman who has been missing for forty years by Lisbeth Salander, a young computer hacker. Director: David Fincher Writers:
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The Matrix (1999) ::: 8.7/10 -- R | 2h 16min | Action, Sci-Fi | 31 March 1999 (USA) -- When a beautiful stranger leads computer hacker Neo to a forbidding underworld, he discovers the shocking truth--the life he knows is the elaborate deception of an evil cyber-intelligence. Directors: Lana Wachowski (as The Wachowski Brothers), Lilly Wachowski (as The Wachowski Brothers) Writers:
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The Method (2005) ::: 7.2/10 -- El mtodo (original title) -- The Method Poster -- 7 Spanish top corporate job candidates are left in a room and informed on computer screens about their tasks and that one of them is an observer. Let the psyching begin. Director: Marcelo Pieyro Writers:
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The Sarah Jane Adventures ::: TV-PG | 1h | Family, Sci-Fi | TV Series (20072020) -- Investigative journalist Sarah Jane Smith, with the help of her adopted son, his friends, and an intelligent supercomputer, combats evil alien forces here on Earth. Creator:
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The Signal (2014) ::: 6.1/10 -- PG-13 | 1h 37min | Drama, Mystery, Sci-Fi | 10 July 2014 (Germany) -- On a road trip, Nic and two friends are drawn to an isolated area by a computer genius. When everything suddenly goes dark, Nic regains consciousness - only to find himself in a waking nightmare. Director: William Eubank Writers:
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The Thirteenth Floor (1999) ::: 7.1/10 -- R | 1h 40min | Mystery, Sci-Fi, Thriller | 28 May 1999 (USA) -- A computer scientist running a virtual reality simulation of 1937 becomes the primary suspect when his colleague and mentor is murdered. Director: Josef Rusnak Writers: Daniel F. Galouye (book) (as Daniel Galouye), Josef Rusnak (screenplay)
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The Zero Theorem (2013) ::: 6.1/10 -- R | 1h 47min | Comedy, Drama, Fantasy | 19 August 2014 (USA) -- A hugely talented but socially isolated computer operator is tasked by Management to prove the Zero Theorem: that the universe ends as nothing, rendering life meaningless. But meaning is what he already craves. Director: Terry Gilliam Writers:
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TRON (1982) ::: 6.8/10 -- PG | 1h 36min | Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi | 9 July 1982 (USA) -- A computer hacker is abducted into the digital world and forced to participate in gladiatorial games where his only chance of escape is with the help of a heroic security program. Director: Steven Lisberger Writers:
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TRON: Uprising ::: TV-Y7 | 30min | Animation, Action, Adventure | TV Series (20122013) -- In the computer world of the Grid, a young program joins Tron's fight against their world's tyranny. Creators: Adam Horowitz, Edward Kitsis, Steven Lisberger | 1 more credit
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Upgrade (2018) ::: 7.5/10 -- R | 1h 40min | Action, Sci-Fi, Thriller | 1 June 2018 (USA) -- Set in the near-future, technology controls nearly all aspects of life. But when the world of Grey, a self-labeled technophobe, is turned upside down, his only hope for revenge is an experimental computer chip implant. Director: Leigh Whannell Writer:
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WarGames (1983) ::: 7.1/10 -- PG | 1h 54min | Action, Adventure, Drama | 3 June 1983 (USA) -- A young man finds a back door into a military central computer in which reality is confused with game-playing, possibly starting World War III. Director: John Badham Writers: Lawrence Lasker, Walter F. Parkes
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Weird Science (1985) ::: 6.6/10 -- PG-13 | 1h 34min | Comedy, Romance, Sci-Fi | 2 August 1985 (USA) -- Two high school nerds use a computer program to literally create the perfect woman, but she turns their lives upside down. Director: John Hughes Writer: John Hughes
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Weird Science ::: Approved | 30min | Comedy, Fantasy, Sci-Fi | TV Series (19941998) Gary Wallace and Wyatt Donnelly create their dream woman, Lisa, on their computer. Lisa has extraordinary powers and can grant the boys their wishes for short periods of time. Creators: Alan Cross, Tom Spezialy Stars:
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Who Am I (2014) ::: 7.6/10 -- Who Am I - Kein System ist sicher (original title) -- (Germany) Who Am I Poster -- Benjamin, a young German computer whiz, is invited to join a subversive hacker group that wants to be noticed on the world's stage. Director: Baran bo Odar Writers:
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https://videospiele.fandom.com/wiki/Benutzer_Blog:Mehra_Milo/Der_Deutsche_Computerspielpreis_2019
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https://vim.fandom.com/wiki/Decrease_chances_of_file_corruption_in_case_of_computer_crash
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https://vim.fandom.com/wiki/Synchronize_configuration_to_many_computers
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https://whitewolf.fandom.com/wiki/Computer
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https://whitewolf.fandom.com/wiki/The_Computer
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https://witcher-games.fandom.com/wiki/The_Witcher_(computer_game)
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Ai no Kusabi (2012) -- -- AIC -- 4 eps -- Light novel -- Drama Romance Sci-Fi Yaoi -- Ai no Kusabi (2012) Ai no Kusabi (2012) -- The story is set in the future on the planet named Amoi which is controlled by a supercomputer named Jupiter. Among the mostly male human population, the light-haired elite class is allowed to temporarily keep the dark-haired "mongrels" as pets. One elite member, Iason, encounters a mongrel named Riki in the slums and decides to take him in. However, Iason keeps Riki longer than it is socially approved, and rumors abound about their possible relationship. -- -- Licensor: -- Media Blasters -- OVA - Jan 18, 2012 -- 28,949 6.63
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Ai no Kusabi (2012) -- -- AIC -- 4 eps -- Light novel -- Drama Romance Sci-Fi Yaoi -- Ai no Kusabi (2012) Ai no Kusabi (2012) -- The story is set in the future on the planet named Amoi which is controlled by a supercomputer named Jupiter. Among the mostly male human population, the light-haired elite class is allowed to temporarily keep the dark-haired "mongrels" as pets. One elite member, Iason, encounters a mongrel named Riki in the slums and decides to take him in. However, Iason keeps Riki longer than it is socially approved, and rumors abound about their possible relationship. -- OVA - Jan 18, 2012 -- 28,949 6.63
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Ai no Kusabi -- -- AIC -- 2 eps -- Light novel -- Drama Romance Sci-Fi Yaoi -- Ai no Kusabi Ai no Kusabi -- On the planet Amoi, a person's status is primarily dictated by the color of their hair. This society is run by the AI supercomputer known as Jupiter and its governing board of perfect blondes, referred to as Blondies, living in the capital city of Tanagura. However, the darker-haired humans live out their lives in the golden "pleasure city" of Midas and its outlying slum Ceres. They are known as "mongrels," and most cannot progress out of the slums. -- -- Three years ago, a boy named Riki disappeared from the slums of Ceres. Once the revered leader of the gang Bison, a sudden encounter with an elite Blondie, Iason Mink, forced Riki to abandon everything he had cultivated. The boy was snatched from his home and forced to become Iason's pet. Riki has spent the past three years enduring numerous blows to his pride, his time in Tanagura nothing but a form of torture. -- -- Now that Riki has returned, Bison once again rallies behind him. The risk he finds himself in, however, is much greater than ever before—there is always someone ready to sell him out. -- -- OVA - Aug 1, 1992 -- 32,431 7.12
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Akira (Shin Anime) -- -- Sunrise -- ? eps -- Manga -- Action Military Sci-Fi Supernatural Seinen -- Akira (Shin Anime) Akira (Shin Anime) -- A new anime adaptation for Otomo's highly acclaimed post-apocalyptic cyberpunk manga series Akira. -- -- (Source: MAL News) -- - - ??? ??, ???? -- 12,362 N/A -- -- Plastic Little -- -- animate Film -- 1 ep -- Original -- Action Adventure Comedy Ecchi Mecha Military Romance Sci-Fi -- Plastic Little Plastic Little -- Set on the planet Yietta, whose colonists make their living by exploiting the planet's unique liquid-gas oceans, Plastic Little begins as the Yietans are finally about to pay off their debts to the Galactic Federation. Unfortunately, there are those who would rather not let Yietta slip through their fingers... -- -- Enter Tita, 17 year old captain of the Cha Cha Maru. Together with her crew, Tita specializes in capturing Yietta's exotic life forms for intergalactic pet shops, but through plain bad luck she finds herself, instead, at the core of a sinister plot to take over Yietta! By rescuing 16 year old Elysse from the very clutches of the military, Tita puts the lives of both herself and her crew in mortal peril... but a girl's got to do what a girl's got to do! -- -- As the plotters mobilize their forces in a desperate bid to retrieve Elysse, whom they believe possesses a vital computer code, Tita must play a dangerous game of tag with an entire army of professional killers! It's Cat and Mouse on a planetwide scale, with one crucial difference: Mice don't shoot back, but Tita's does! -- -- (Source: AnimeNfo) -- -- Licensor: -- ADV Films -- OVA - Mar 21, 1994 -- 12,320 6.13
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Aquarion Logos -- -- Satelight -- 26 eps -- Original -- Action Comedy Drama Fantasy Mecha Romance Sci-Fi -- Aquarion Logos Aquarion Logos -- For thousands of years after its development, mankind used the written word for communication between people and generations. As millenia passed and technology became more prevalent, writing - and thus, communication as a whole - diminished, until it could only be found on cell phones and computer screens. Seeing an opportunity, the sorcerer Sogan Kenzaki starts infecting words with the Nesta Virus, which brings them to life and turns them into monsters called MJBK (Menace of Japanese with Biological Kinetic energy). -- -- To counter this attack against humanity, an organization known as DEAVA (Division of EArth Verbalism Ability) assembles a group of youths with the ability of "Verbalism". They have to pilot the vector machines, which are used to form the mechas dubbed "Aquarions". The one wild card in the situation is the self-dubbed "savior", a young man who is the direct relative of a famous calligrapher, named Akira Kaibuki. -- -- Licensor: -- Funimation -- 20,066 5.71
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Arve Rezzle: Kikaijikake no Yousei-tachi -- -- Zexcs -- 1 ep -- Light novel -- Action Drama Mystery Sci-Fi Thriller -- Arve Rezzle: Kikaijikake no Yousei-tachi Arve Rezzle: Kikaijikake no Yousei-tachi -- One day, when Remu Mikage is on a video call with his sister, Shiki, who has traveled to the futuristic Okinotori-island Mega Float City for school, she confesses that both the audio and visuals of her are completely artificial. In order to be more efficient in her studies, Shiki has used neural-linked nanomachines to upload her consciousness onto a computer and is storing her physical body in a "body pool." While shocked, Remu is supportive of his sister's decision, until the disaster known as the "Early Rapture" happens. -- -- The Early Rapture causes everyone who has uploaded their consciousnesses to either fall into a coma or perish. Remu visits his sister's empty apartment one last time, but is shocked when Shiki arrives at the door. With no memory of her family or past, and being pursued by a violent group of researchers, Shiki and her brother are forced to flee using her newfound power of nanomachine manipulation. -- -- Movie - Mar 2, 2013 -- 24,206 6.29
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Bokura no -- -- Gonzo -- 24 eps -- Manga -- Sci-Fi Psychological Drama Mecha Seinen -- Bokura no Bokura no -- 15 children, 8 boys and 7 girls, are enjoying their summer camp together when they suddenly discover a grotto by the sea. When they enter the mysterious place they find a room full of computers, as well as a man named Kokopelli, who introduces himself as the owner. He claims to be working on a game which involves a giant robot that has been designed to protect the Earth from 15 different alien invasions. Kokopelli hasn't been able to test the game yet, so he persuades all but one of the children to sign a contract in what he claims will be a fun adventure. -- -- However, as soon as the contracts are signed things start to take a much darker turn. In Bokurano, the children must now pilot the giant robot Zearth one at a time in the hopes that they will have what it takes to defeat all of the upcoming enemies. But Kokopelli has left out one very important piece of information: the giant robot Zearth's energy source. -- -- Licensor: -- Discotek Media -- 154,492 7.65
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Burn Up Excess -- -- Magic Bus -- 13 eps -- Original -- Action Adventure Comedy Ecchi Police Sci-Fi Shounen -- Burn Up Excess Burn Up Excess -- Follows the exploits of Team Warrior, a special anti-terror wing of the Neo-Tokyo Police force. Team Warrior is comprised of the habitually broke Rio, gun-crazy Maya, computer specialist Lillica, tech-expert Nanvel, piliot/voyeur Yuji, and is led by the enigmatic Maki. The team faces a number of missions, ranging from bodyguard duty, breaking up robbery and arms rackets, and providing security for a very powerful tank. Rio and company continually thwart the terrorist aims of Ruby, an operative for a shadowy cabal of powerful men. Before the final showdown, the circumstances behind the formation of Team Warrior, how the precocious Rio came to join it, and Maki's painful past will be revealed. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- ADV Films -- TV - Dec 12, 1997 -- 9,423 6.54
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Buttobi!! CPU -- -- OLM -- 3 eps -- Manga -- Comedy Ecchi Magic Sci-Fi Seinen -- Buttobi!! CPU Buttobi!! CPU -- Embarrassed to be the only member of the Electric Brain Study Society who doesn’t own a computer, Akira Takaoka is thrilled when an electronics store advertises a PC9821 for only ninety-eight thousand yen. The deal is limited to the first five customers; unfortunately, by the time Akira gets there, the PCs are sold out. However, a mysterious man in the back alley offers him the exact same deal. Akira takes the deal, only to realize that this PC is not a 9821 version, but a 2198 version instead. It turns out that the PC2198 is an advanced bio-type computer that needs a nearly constant input of sperm to function! -- -- The PC2198, named Mimi, now has to defend Akira from the evil Apple Nacintosh sisters who want to take over the entire Japanese PC market. Will the embarrassed Akira be able to supply Mimi with what she needs to win? -- -- -- Licensor: -- Nozomi Entertainment -- OVA - Apr 25, 1997 -- 7,086 6.23
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Chobits -- -- Madhouse -- 26 eps -- Manga -- Sci-Fi Comedy Drama Romance Ecchi Seinen -- Chobits Chobits -- When computers start to look like humans, can love remain the same? -- -- Hideki Motosuwa is a young country boy who is studying hard to get into college. Coming from a poor background, he can barely afford the expenses, let alone the newest fad: Persocoms, personal computers that look exactly like human beings. One evening while walking home, he finds an abandoned Persocom. After taking her home and managing to activate her, she seems to be defective, as she can only say one word, "Chii," which eventually becomes her name. Unlike other Persocoms, however, Chii cannot download information onto her hard drive, so Hideki decides to teach her about the world the old-fashioned way, while studying for his college entrance exams at the same time. -- -- Along with his friends, Hideki tries to unravel the mystery of Chii, who may be a "Chobit," an urban legend about special units that have real human emotions and thoughts, and love toward their owner. But can romance flourish between a Persocom and a human? -- -- -- Licensor: -- Funimation, Geneon Entertainment USA -- 410,390 7.43
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Corrector Yui -- -- Nippon Animation -- 52 eps -- Original -- Sci-Fi Adventure Comedy Magic -- Corrector Yui Corrector Yui -- Yui is an average schoolgirl who lives in a future where all computers are supported by a single global network known as COMNET. Yui is a computer-illiterate girl who after a computer-lab accident is approached by IR, a raccoon looking corrector computer program, which tells her she must save COMNET. She must stop the rogue A.I. (Artificial Intelligence) computer program known as Grosser and his hench-programs from taking over the world. Grosser was originally designed to be that manager of all of COMNET. At first she's very reluctant to play the heroine because of her complete lack of knowledge and ability with computers. To save COMNET she must find and gain the trust of the other seven wayward corrector programs. They must also find the creator or COMNET Professor Inukai, to help stop Grosser for good. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- VIZ Media -- 12,488 6.82
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Cowboy Bebop -- -- Sunrise -- 26 eps -- Original -- Action Adventure Comedy Drama Sci-Fi Space -- Cowboy Bebop Cowboy Bebop -- In the year 2071, humanity has colonized several of the planets and moons of the solar system leaving the now uninhabitable surface of planet Earth behind. The Inter Solar System Police attempts to keep peace in the galaxy, aided in part by outlaw bounty hunters, referred to as "Cowboys." The ragtag team aboard the spaceship Bebop are two such individuals. -- -- Mellow and carefree Spike Spiegel is balanced by his boisterous, pragmatic partner Jet Black as the pair makes a living chasing bounties and collecting rewards. Thrown off course by the addition of new members that they meet in their travels—Ein, a genetically engineered, highly intelligent Welsh Corgi; femme fatale Faye Valentine, an enigmatic trickster with memory loss; and the strange computer whiz kid Edward Wong—the crew embarks on thrilling adventures that unravel each member's dark and mysterious past little by little. -- -- Well-balanced with high density action and light-hearted comedy, Cowboy Bebop is a space Western classic and an homage to the smooth and improvised music it is named after. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Bandai Entertainment, Funimation -- 1,316,661 8.77
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Digimon Adventure 02: Diablomon no Gyakushuu -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Original -- Adventure Comedy Drama Kids Sci-Fi -- Digimon Adventure 02: Diablomon no Gyakushuu Digimon Adventure 02: Diablomon no Gyakushuu -- After the events of 02, everything is finally getting back to normal. That is, until a strangely familiar icon starts showing up on computer systems around the Japan. And not just computer systems... TVs, mobile phones, video games; anything with a screen with online capabilities. And this icon seems to be looking for somone... Yagami Taichi, and Ishida Yamato, who defeated it several years before. Yes, it turns out that this jellyfish digimon is in fact Diablomon, the Virus-type Digimon that was defeated in the second movie. But this time, he's learned to make himself physical, and is sending thousands of copies of himself into the real world. -- -- Koushiro and Ken devise a plan to rid the world of the virus once and for all, but it'll take the help of all the Destined, past and present. Once again, it's a race against time to put a stop to Diablomon's plot... but even that is cloaked in shadow. -- -- Will the revival of Omagamon be enough to stop Diablomon a second time, or will the millions of copies prove enough of a power boost to shrug off the "Digimon Champion of Justice"? Of course, he hasn't seen the new breed of Chosen, nor the new techniques. It's a fight to the finish, with the destruction of Tokyo resting on the line. -- -- (Source: AniDB) -- -- Licensor: -- Saban Brands -- Movie - Mar 3, 2001 -- 46,582 7.28
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Digimon Adventure: Bokura no War Game! -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Original -- Sci-Fi Adventure Comedy Kids -- Digimon Adventure: Bokura no War Game! Digimon Adventure: Bokura no War Game! -- This movie takes place after the Adventure series ends. It begins when a new Digimon Egg is found on the internet, and manages to penetrate into almost every computer system in Japan. When the egg hatches, it's identified as a new kind of Digimon, a Virus-type. It sustains itself by eating data from various system, and starts wreaking havok in Japan. As it consumes more and more data, it continues to evolve. And Taichi and Koushiro decide it's time to stop it. -- -- They're off, sending Agumon and Tentomon through the internet to fight off this new enemy. But, with the Virus controlling systems like the American military, all too soon, this digital menace may become all too real. Calling in the help of Yamato and Takeru, they hope that they can stop what's already begun, and maybe save this world a second time. -- -- (Source: AniDB) -- -- Licensor: -- Saban Entertainment -- Movie - Mar 4, 2000 -- 64,759 7.77
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Digimon Adventure Movie -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Original -- Action Fantasy Kids Sci-Fi -- Digimon Adventure Movie Digimon Adventure Movie -- A brother and sister discover the digital world is more than 1s and 0s when a living creature arrives out of the family computer. The adventures of a group of children start with the appearance of a Digital Monster in the real world. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- Saban Entertainment -- Movie - Mar 6, 1999 -- 98,236 7.57
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Digimon Adventure Movie -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Original -- Action Fantasy Kids Sci-Fi -- Digimon Adventure Movie Digimon Adventure Movie -- A brother and sister discover the digital world is more than 1s and 0s when a living creature arrives out of the family computer. The adventures of a group of children start with the appearance of a Digital Monster in the real world. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- Movie - Mar 6, 1999 -- 98,236 7.57
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Digimon Tamers: Boukensha-tachi no Tatakai -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Original -- Adventure Drama Sci-Fi Shounen -- Digimon Tamers: Boukensha-tachi no Tatakai Digimon Tamers: Boukensha-tachi no Tatakai -- Takato and Guilmon go on vacation to Okinawa and meet a fellow tamer, Minami. Back in Japan, a popular computer pet suddenly becomes a virus, infecting all of the computers who have it. As the virus spreads, Takato tries to figure out why digimon are all attacking his new friend, and what her connection is to the virus. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- Saban Brands -- Movie - Jul 14, 2001 -- 18,897 6.98
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Digimon Tamers: Boukensha-tachi no Tatakai -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Original -- Adventure Drama Sci-Fi Shounen -- Digimon Tamers: Boukensha-tachi no Tatakai Digimon Tamers: Boukensha-tachi no Tatakai -- Takato and Guilmon go on vacation to Okinawa and meet a fellow tamer, Minami. Back in Japan, a popular computer pet suddenly becomes a virus, infecting all of the computers who have it. As the virus spreads, Takato tries to figure out why digimon are all attacking his new friend, and what her connection is to the virus. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- Movie - Jul 14, 2001 -- 18,897 6.98
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Digimon X-Evolution -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Original -- Action Adventure Fantasy Sci-Fi -- Digimon X-Evolution Digimon X-Evolution -- A virtual world was created by the present-day network called the "Digital World." The "Digital Monster," which is a digital life object, was born, and the host computer Yggdrasil managed the different Digital World areas. However, it developed the X Program of fear to eliminate all Digimon in the old world and develop a new Digital World for only certain Digimon... Now, the greatest crisis ever approaches the Digital World. -- -- The X-Digimon, a new type of Digital Monster, is hunted by the Royal Knights who protect the Digital Worlds. Their master, the network overseer Yggdrasil, seeks to set in motion Project Ark to renew the Digital Worlds and create new Digimon, but at the cost of all other digital life. This new X-Digimon will seek out the answers to its own existence as it tries to protect the life of all Digimon, and in the process it will change the Digital Worlds forever. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- Movie - Jan 3, 2005 -- 18,291 7.10
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Digital Devil Story: Megami Tensei -- -- animate Film -- 1 ep -- Light novel -- Adventure Mystery Horror Demons Psychological Supernatural Drama Fantasy School -- Digital Devil Story: Megami Tensei Digital Devil Story: Megami Tensei -- Akemi Nakajima, is a high school student with a genius talent for computer programming. -- One day, Yumiko Shirasagi is transferred to the same class as him. She feels she knows Nakajima from somewhere, but doesn't try to deal with it. After school, Nakajima and a couple of classmates held a ceremony to summon the devil. Nakajima summons the devil Loki on the computer display while presenting a female offering. What will happen to Yumiko, who witnessed the scene? -- -- (Source: Official site, edited) -- OVA - Mar 25, 1987 -- 5,914 5.20
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Dragon Ball Z Movie 07: Kyokugen Battle!! Sandai Super Saiyajin -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Manga -- Action Adventure Comedy Fantasy Sci-Fi Shounen -- Dragon Ball Z Movie 07: Kyokugen Battle!! Sandai Super Saiyajin Dragon Ball Z Movie 07: Kyokugen Battle!! Sandai Super Saiyajin -- Dr. Gero's Androids #13, #14, and #15 are awakened by the laboratory computers and immediately head to the mall where Goku is shopping. After Goku, Trunks, and Vegeta defeat #14 and #15, #13 absorbs their inner computers and becomes a super being greater than the original three separately were. Now it is up to Goku to stop him. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- Funimation -- Movie - Jul 11, 1992 -- 96,252 6.87
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Dragon Ball Z Movie 07: Kyokugen Battle!! Sandai Super Saiyajin -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Manga -- Action Adventure Comedy Fantasy Sci-Fi Shounen -- Dragon Ball Z Movie 07: Kyokugen Battle!! Sandai Super Saiyajin Dragon Ball Z Movie 07: Kyokugen Battle!! Sandai Super Saiyajin -- Dr. Gero's Androids #13, #14, and #15 are awakened by the laboratory computers and immediately head to the mall where Goku is shopping. After Goku, Trunks, and Vegeta defeat #14 and #15, #13 absorbs their inner computers and becomes a super being greater than the original three separately were. Now it is up to Goku to stop him. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- Movie - Jul 11, 1992 -- 96,252 6.87
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ēlDLIVE -- -- Studio Pierrot -- 12 eps -- Manga -- Action Sci-Fi Space Police Shounen -- ēlDLIVE ēlDLIVE -- Chuuta Kokonose is an orphan who lives with his aunt. For as long as he can remember, he's had a voice in his head, but other than that he's a normal boy—right until the day when a strange-looking thing follows him home and teleports him to a place filled with more fantastic creatures. It's a space police station, and Rein Brickke, the Chief of Solar System Department, tells him that he's been chosen by the computer as a possible candidate to join the police force. Misuzu Sonokata, a girl from Chuuta's school with an angelic face and ill temper who turns out to be one of Rein Brickke's subordinates, doesn't think him suitable for such a job. Chuuta, who was shocked at first, decides to take the aptitude test after being urged by the voice in his head and to prove Misuzu wrong. -- 42,658 6.14
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ēlDLIVE -- -- Studio Pierrot -- 12 eps -- Manga -- Action Sci-Fi Space Police Shounen -- ēlDLIVE ēlDLIVE -- Chuuta Kokonose is an orphan who lives with his aunt. For as long as he can remember, he's had a voice in his head, but other than that he's a normal boy—right until the day when a strange-looking thing follows him home and teleports him to a place filled with more fantastic creatures. It's a space police station, and Rein Brickke, the Chief of Solar System Department, tells him that he's been chosen by the computer as a possible candidate to join the police force. Misuzu Sonokata, a girl from Chuuta's school with an angelic face and ill temper who turns out to be one of Rein Brickke's subordinates, doesn't think him suitable for such a job. Chuuta, who was shocked at first, decides to take the aptitude test after being urged by the voice in his head and to prove Misuzu wrong. -- -- Licensor: -- Crunchyroll, Funimation -- 42,658 6.14
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Extra -- -- Studio 4°C -- 1 ep -- - -- Action Sci-Fi Music Dementia Horror -- Extra Extra -- Animation veteran and Studio 4°C collaborator Koji Morimoto teamed up with techo artist Ken Ishii for this AMV. -- -- "EXTRA" is a random cross talk about computer, music, images, and Internet by two authors working on their first collaboration in techno music and animation. This short animation which is stored on CD-ROM and immediately shakes the viewer with question as to what the word of the title, "EXTRA," means. -- -- (Source: AniDB) -- Music - Jan 1, 1995 -- 3,971 5.96
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Fate/Extra: Last Encore -- -- Shaft -- 10 eps -- Game -- Action Fantasy Magic -- Fate/Extra: Last Encore Fate/Extra: Last Encore -- A technological hell masquerading as paradise, Tsukimihara Academy is an artificial high school that serves as the setting for the next Holy Grail War. Created by the Moon Cell computer, the school is inhabited by Earth-projected souls who have even the slightest aptitude for being a "Master." Of these 256 souls, 128 will be chosen for the main tournament and granted a Servant. With all of the Masters selected, the Academy activates a purge, targeting the remaining lifeforms for elimination. -- -- Awakening in a pool of his own blood, Hakuno Kishinami refuses to die. Fueled by unknown feelings of hatred, he vows to fight for survival. As he struggles to escape from a relentless pursuer, he finds a crimson blade plunged into the ground; and by pulling it out, Hakuno summons his own Servant, Saber, who instantly destroys his pursuer in a flurry of rose petals. With his newfound power, Hakuno must now begin his journey to Moon Cell's core, the Angelica Cage. There, he will unveil the reason for this artificial world and the secrets of his own blood-soaked past. -- -- 165,564 6.29
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Galerians: Rion -- -- - -- 3 eps -- - -- Adventure Drama Horror Military Mystery Psychological Sci-Fi Shounen Supernatural -- Galerians: Rion Galerians: Rion -- Six years have passed since Rion discovered his own identity as an artificial being, yet succeeded in destroying the genocidal Mother Computer, Dorothy, before perishing himself. Now reactivated by Lilia, Rion awakens to find that Dorothy managed to execute one final catastrophic program, rendering a new evil crew to finish her goal of human annihilation. It is a fully 3D CGI animated OVA based on the hit PlayStation game, called Galerians, released in August, 1999. -- -- (Source: AniDB) -- OVA - Apr 24, 2002 -- 2,852 5.48
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Ginga Patrol PJ -- -- Eiken -- 26 eps -- - -- Drama Military Sci-Fi Space -- Ginga Patrol PJ Ginga Patrol PJ -- Once Upon a Time... Space differs from the rest of the Once Upon a Time titles in the sense that the series revolve on a dramatic content rather than an educational premise. The series still has a handful of educational information (such as an episode discussing the rings of Planet Saturn). -- -- The series succeeds Once Upon a Time... Man. It reprises almost the entire totality of the characters of the previous series and adapts them into a science-fiction context. -- -- The story tells about the confrontation of many big galactic powers. Among them there is the Omega Confederation, of which Earth is a member of; the military republic of Cassiopée led by the general Le Teigneux; and a powerful supercomputer which controls an army of robots. Once Upon a Time... Space features the adventures of Pierrot (son of colonel Pierre and president Pierrette) and his friend Psi. -- TV - Oct 9, 1982 -- 882 6.63
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.hack//The Movie: Sekai no Mukou ni -- -- Anima -- 1 ep -- Game -- Action Adventure Fantasy Game Magic Mystery Sci-Fi -- .hack//The Movie: Sekai no Mukou ni .hack//The Movie: Sekai no Mukou ni -- In 2024, the computer network prevails throughout daily life. Sora Yuuki is a 14-year-old girl. One day, she is invited to an online game "The World". After an accident in the game, the real world begins to deform. -- Movie - Jan 21, 2012 -- 16,358 7.13
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Hand Maid May -- -- Production Reed, TNK -- 10 eps -- Original -- Comedy Ecchi Harem Romance Sci-Fi -- Hand Maid May Hand Maid May -- Saotome Kazuya is a computer whiz. One day his friend Nanbara, threatens him with a computer virus. Trying to stop the virus, Kazuya ends up making a special order. May is a cyberdoll that arrives at his door a few minutes later and she is 1/6th the size of a normal person, which makes for many awkward situations. Not to mention the fact Kazuya can't even afford to keep May. Cyberdyne is not satisfied with Kazuya's non-payments and will do anything to retrieve CBD May. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- Geneon Entertainment USA -- 25,901 6.73
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High School Agent -- -- J.C.Staff -- 2 eps -- Manga -- Action Drama Military -- High School Agent High School Agent -- Based on a manga by Tanimura Hitoshi, serialized in Comic Burger. -- -- Teenager Kanemori Kousuke is a secret agent for the international VN spy network. Using his computer hacking skills, he tracks international criminals. Later he goes after Neo-Nazis to the Arctic were they try to raise a U-boat with a sinister secret. -- -- (Source: The Anime Encyclopedia) -- OVA - Jul 1, 1987 -- 947 5.47
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Hi no Tori -- -- Tezuka Productions -- 13 eps -- Manga -- Sci-Fi Adventure Historical Supernatural Drama -- Hi no Tori Hi no Tori -- From prehistoric times to the distant future, Hi no Tori portrays how the legendary immortal bird Phoenix acts as a witness and chronicler for the history of mankind's endless struggle in search of power, justice, and freedom. -- -- The Dawn -- Since time immemorial, people have sought out the legendary Phoenix for its blood, which is known to grant eternal life. Hearing about rumored Phoenix sightings in the Land of Fire, Himiko—the cruel queen of Yamatai obsessed with immortality—sends her army to conquer the nation and retrieve the creature. Young Nagi, his elder sister Hinaku, and her foreign husband Guzuri are the only survivors of the slaughter. But while Nagi is taken prisoner by the enemy, elsewhere, Hinaku has a shocking revelation. -- -- The Resurrection -- In a distant future where Earth has become uninhabitable, Leona undergoes surgery on a space station to recover from a deadly accident. However, while also suffering from amnesia, his brain is now half cybernetic and causes him to see people as formless scraps and robots as humans. Falling in love with Chihiro, a discarded robot, they escape together from the space station to prevent Chihiro from being destroyed. Yet as his lost memories gradually return, Leona will have to confront the painful truth about his past. -- -- The Transformation -- Yearning for independence, Sakon no Suke—the only daughter of a tyrant ruler—kills priestess Yao Bikuni, the sole person capable of curing her father's illness. Consequently, she and her faithful servant, Kahei, are unexpectedly confined to the temple grounds of Bikuni's sanctuary. While searching for a way out, Sakon no Suke assumes the priestess's position and uses a miraculous feather to heal all those reaching out for help. -- -- The Sun -- After his faction loses the war, Prince Harima's head is replaced with a wolf's. An old medicine woman who recognizes his bloodline assists him and the wounded General Azumi-no-muraji Saruta in escaping to Wah Land. But their arrival at a small Wah village is met with unexpected trouble as Houben, a powerful Buddhist monk, wants Harima dead. With the aid of the Ku clan wolf gods that protect the village's surroundings, he survives the murder attempt. After tensions settle, Saruta uses his established reputation in Wah to persuade the villagers to welcome Harima into their community. Over a period of time, Harima becomes the village's respected leader under the name Inugami no Sukune. But while the young prince adapts to his new role, he must remain vigilant as new dangers soon arise and threaten his recently acquired tranquility. -- -- The Future -- Life on Earth has gradually ceased to exist, with the survivors taking refuge in underground cities. To avoid human extinction, Doctor Saruta unsuccessfully tries to recreate life in his laboratory. However, the unexpected visit of Masato Yamanobe, his alien girlfriend Tamami, and his colleague Rock Holmes reveals a disturbing crisis: the computers that regulate the subterranean cities have initiated a nuclear war that will eliminate all of mankind. -- -- TV - Mar 21, 2004 -- 7,595 7.10
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Hustle!! Tokitama-kun -- -- - -- 1 ep -- Original -- Dementia -- Hustle!! Tokitama-kun Hustle!! Tokitama-kun -- Director's description: "I want to show you a world that you have never seen." I think this is something that all computer graphics producers strive for. What to create?! How do you create it with computer graphics? The skill of drawing does not change that much when performed on a computer instead of paper. This work is a mixture of traditional cel-based animation, 3-D animation and 2-D computer graphics techniques, each with its own history and production standards. My theme for this production was "The Transformation of Time and Space." I used ToonShader and hand drawn animation to achieve the desired effect. I think that I have succeeded in creating a world that you have never seen. -- -- (Source: plaza.bunka.go.jp) -- Special - ??? ??, 1998 -- 644 4.33
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Kagerou Daze: In a Day's -- -- Jumonji -- 1 ep -- Music -- Sci-Fi Slice of Life Comedy Supernatural Magic Romance -- Kagerou Daze: In a Day's Kagerou Daze: In a Day's -- Shintarou Kisaragi—a NEET who shut himself inside his room for 2 years—has been living his life normally until he met a cyber girl named Ene, who appeared in his computer screen when someone anonymously sent him a mysterious e-mail one year ago. One day, Ene had been messing with Shintaro's PC, which causes him have to go to the outside world for first time in two years. -- -- (Source: Official site) -- Movie - Nov 4, 2016 -- 14,035 6.19
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Kashikokimono -- -- - -- 1 ep -- Original -- Music Dementia -- Kashikokimono Kashikokimono -- A combination of hand-drawn animation and computer-based generative animation exploring music and animation as a form of organic expression. Animated by Takahiro Hayakawa. -- Movie - ??? ??, 2004 -- 337 N/A -- -- Mechano: Scientific Attack Force -- -- - -- 3 eps -- - -- Comedy Dementia Fantasy Horror Music Parody -- Mechano: Scientific Attack Force Mechano: Scientific Attack Force -- Three 10-minute videos present a trippy view into the minds of their creators. Brought together by Pierre Taki of Denki Groove, Mechano: Scientific Attack Force features three shorts done in very different styles. -- -- The three short films are: -- -- "Plastic Gun Man" - a 3D Western spoof -- "World Meccano Triangle" - a music video reminiscent of '90s era screensavers -- "Haiirogaoka no Soridaijin" (translated as "Prime Minister of Gray Hill") - an anime-style animated video parody of Akira Mochizuki's famous 1977 manga, Yuuhi ga Oka no Souri Daijin -- OVA - Sep 1, 1995 -- 334 N/A -- -- Motion Lumine -- -- - -- 1 ep -- - -- Dementia -- Motion Lumine Motion Lumine -- Furukawa Taku film. -- Movie - ??? ??, 1978 -- 334 4.75
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Kiddy Grade -- -- Gonzo -- 24 eps -- Original -- Action Sci-Fi Super Power Ecchi Mecha -- Kiddy Grade Kiddy Grade -- In the distant future, humanity has taken to the skies and colonized many planets throughout the universe. An agency known as the Galactic Organization of Trade and Tariffs (GOTT) has been formed to maintain order. Within GOTT, a secret squad of enhanced human beings—known as the ES Unit—carry out secret missions to put a stop to major galactic crimes. Two such operatives are the lowly C-ranked Éclair and Lumière. -- -- Despite being on the bottom of the totem pole, the pair wield formidable powers: Éclair's superhuman strength and lipstick whip and Lumière's ability to take control of any computer. Together, they can take on any mission that GOTT throws at them. But as they complete more and more missions, the duo begin to uncover a major conspiracy that leaves them questioning everything they know about themselves and the entire galaxy. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Funimation -- TV - Oct 9, 2002 -- 40,723 7.21
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Kokoro Connect -- -- SILVER LINK. -- 13 eps -- Light novel -- Slice of Life Comedy Supernatural Drama Romance School -- Kokoro Connect Kokoro Connect -- When five students at Yamaboshi Academy realize that there are no clubs where they fit in, they band together to form the Student Cultural Society, or "StuCS" for short. The club consists of: Taichi Yaegashi, a hardcore wrestling fan; Iori Nagase, an indecisive optimist; Himeko Inaba, a calm computer genius; Yui Kiriyama, a petite karate practitioner; and Yoshifumi Aoki, the class clown. -- -- One day, Aoki and Yui experience a strange incident when, without warning, they switch bodies for a short period of time. As this supernatural phenomenon continues to occur randomly amongst the five friends, they begin to realize that it is not just fun and games. Now forced to become closer than ever, they soon discover each other's hidden secrets and emotional scars, which could end up tearing the StuCS and their friendship apart. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Sentai Filmworks -- 660,720 7.81
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Koukaku Kidoutai 2.0 -- -- Production I.G -- 1 ep -- Manga -- Action Sci-Fi Police Psychological Mecha Seinen -- Koukaku Kidoutai 2.0 Koukaku Kidoutai 2.0 -- Mamoru Oshii's first Ghost in the Shell cyberspace film will return to five Japanese theaters in an enhanced Ghost in the Shell 2.0 edition on July 12. The new edition will include new computer graphics and digital effects for some scenes and a reunion of most of the cast members for a new 6.1 surround sound recording. Academy-Award-winning sound mixer/editor Randy Thom (Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence, The Incredibles, The Right Stuff) has overseen the new soundtrack with Kenji Kawai's original music and a final mix that has been produced at Thom and Lucas Digital's Skywalker Sound studio in California. -- -- In the new edition, the enigmatic Puppet Master character will be played by Yoshiko Sakakibara (Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence's Harraway, Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex's Prime Minister Yoko Kayabuki). Iemasa Kayumi (Giant Robo's Chief Chuujou Shizuo, RahXephon's Ernst Von Bähbem) played the role in the original edition. -- -- The film will screen in Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Fukuoka, and Sapporo. Not coincidentally, Oshii's latest film, The Sky Crawlers, will open one month after Ghost in the Shell 2.0 on August 2. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- Manga Entertainment -- Movie - Jul 12, 2008 -- 78,796 8.01
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Kubikiri Cycle: Aoiro Savant to Zaregototsukai -- -- Shaft -- 8 eps -- Novel -- Action Mystery Supernatural Drama -- Kubikiri Cycle: Aoiro Savant to Zaregototsukai Kubikiri Cycle: Aoiro Savant to Zaregototsukai -- Due to a mysterious disease, the genius Iria Akagami has been forced by her family to stay in a mansion on the isolated Wet Crow's Feather Island with only a handful of maids. To keep herself entertained, Iria invites a variety of fellow geniuses to stay as guests in her home, including computer savant Tomo Kunagisa and her unnamed assistant, skilled fortune-teller Maki Himena, famous artist Kanami Ibuki, academic scholar Akane Sonoyama, and renowned cook Yayoi Sashirono. -- -- These visits progress as normal until one of the guests is found gruesomely murdered in the night without a single clue as to the identity of the killer or a possible motive. Tensions rise between those on the island as the killer remains at large, and Tomo's assistant takes it upon himself to uncover the culprit's identity before the murderous events progress any further. -- -- OVA - Oct 26, 2016 -- 80,354 7.81
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Lost Universe -- -- E&G Films -- 26 eps -- Light novel -- Adventure Comedy Drama Sci-Fi Shounen Space -- Lost Universe Lost Universe -- Millie Nocturne has one great goal in life: to be the best in the universe - at absolutely everything! But when she tries her hand at being the "best detective," she ends up an unwilling partner with two people who will change her life forever: Kane Blueriver, the psi-blade-wielding master of the starship Swordbreaker, and Canal, the smart-mouthed holographic image of the ship's computer. -- -- Join this unlikely trio on their adventures as they hurtle through space facing off against intergalactic crime lords, rogue starships, and hijackers dressed as chickens... and that's just the tip of the asteroid! -- -- (Source: RightStuf) -- -- Licensor: -- ADV Films, Nozomi Entertainment -- 14,072 7.02
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Lupin III: Dead or Alive -- -- Tokyo Movie Shinsha -- 1 ep -- Manga -- Action Adventure Mystery Comedy Seinen -- Lupin III: Dead or Alive Lupin III: Dead or Alive -- Lupin, Goemon, and Jigen take a mini-helicopter and head to the mysterious “Drifting Island” looking for a treasure rumored to be hidden somewhere on it. Through their exploration of the island, the trio encounters the lethal “Nanomachine,” the island’s security system. The trio triggers the alarm, springing “the Nanomachine” to life. The key to solving the island’s mystery lies in the small nation of Zufu. This once prosperous nation is now ruled by the ruthless, knife-collecting, General Headhunter. Fujiko does her usual probing and hacks into General Headhunter’s computer hoping to find some crucial information. Zenigata has received a video message from Lupin in which Lupin announces his desire for the priceless treasure. Oleander, a fiery blond officer with some hidden secrets of her own, steps in to help Zenigata. Armed with their newly found information, Lupin, Goemon, Jigen, and Fujiko go back to “Drifting Island,” but this time they are followed by General Headhunter. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- Funimation -- Movie - Apr 20, 1996 -- 8,836 7.16
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Mardock Scramble: The First Compression -- -- GoHands -- 1 ep -- Novel -- Action Sci-Fi Psychological -- Mardock Scramble: The First Compression Mardock Scramble: The First Compression -- Rune Balot is a down-and-out teen prostitute in Mardock City. One day, she's picked up by an ambitious casino manager named Shell who gives her everything she could want. Renewed by a false innocence, a false past, and now the false life Shell has given her, Balot feels grateful. However, she can't help but be curious about why he's done so much for her, so she does some research about his past on a computer. This turns out to be a mistake which will change her life greatly. When Shell finds out what she's done, he attempts to burn her to death by blowing up her car. -- -- Due to the high crime rate in Mardock, a new law called "Scramble 09" has given police carte blanche to take extreme and otherwise illegal measures to revive crime witnesses. With this in mind, they allow a professor to bring Balot back from the brink of death by reassembling her entire body with reinforced synthetic fiber. When she finally wakes up, her confused mental state eventually turns toward revenge as Shell is revealed as her killer. -- -- (Source: Nippon Cinema) -- -- Licensor: -- Sentai Filmworks -- Movie - Oct 8, 2010 -- 64,211 7.47
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Megazone 23 -- -- AIC, Artland, Artmic -- 4 eps -- Original -- Action Sci-Fi Music Mystery Romance Mecha -- Megazone 23 Megazone 23 -- Shougo Yahagi is a young motorcycle enthusiast living in a world of hot bikes, hard rock, and J-pop idols. The general populace go about their lives in peace, under the watchful eyes of a computer program in the guise of pop idol sensation Eve, unbeknownst to them. Shougo himself is mostly concerned with riding his motorcycle and picking up beautiful women like Yui Takanaka, who aspires to be a dancer. -- -- Shougo's life suddenly changes when his friend, Shinji Nakagawa, shows him a top-secret project: the "Garland," an advanced motorcycle that can transform into a robot. Ambushed by the military, Shougo hijacks the Garland and escapes into the city. Evading the military with the help of Yui and her friends, he gradually discovers that their idyllic society is only an illusion. -- -- -- Licensor: -- ADV Films -- OVA - Mar 9, 1985 -- 14,801 6.80
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Mekakucity Actors -- -- Shaft -- 12 eps -- Music -- Sci-Fi Comedy Super Power Supernatural Romance -- Mekakucity Actors Mekakucity Actors -- On the hot summer day of August 14, Shintarou Kisaragi is forced to leave his room for the first time in two years. While arguing with the cyber girl Ene who lives in his computer, Shintarou Kisaragi accidentally spills soda all over his keyboard. Though they try to find a replacement online, most stores are closed due to the Obon festival, leaving them with no other choice but to visit the local department store. Venturing outside makes Shintarou extremely anxious, but the thought of living without his computer is even worse. It's just his luck that on the day he finally goes out, he's caught in a terrifying hostage situation. -- -- Luckily, a group of teenagers with mysterious eye powers, who call themselves the "Mekakushi Dan," assist Shintarou in resolving the situation. As a result, he is forced to join their group, along with Ene. Their abilities seem to be like pieces of a puzzle, connecting one another, and as each member's past is unveiled, the secret that ties them together is slowly brought to light. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Aniplex of America -- 383,621 7.06
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Micro Teukgongdae Diatron 5 -- -- - -- 1 ep -- - -- Action Space Mecha Sci-Fi -- Micro Teukgongdae Diatron 5 Micro Teukgongdae Diatron 5 -- The plot focuses around a Cyborg woman named Ivy, who defends the entire universe from enemies with her built-in evil-sensing computers. The enemy infects her with a virus. Now the only one to save her is Diatron 5, the mecha shrunk down to microscopic size that goes in to fight the bacteria. Two kids, a battle station called the "Star Wars" and Diatron's inventor join her in the battle against evil. Evil being an androgynous woman named Mary, her brother with blue skin who looks suspiciously like Spock and their fleet of robots and forest green demon-like aliens. -- -- (Source: TV Tropes) -- Movie - Jul 20, 1985 -- 797 4.74
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Midnight Eye: Gokuu -- -- Madhouse -- 1 ep -- Manga -- Action Sci-Fi Mystery Seinen -- Midnight Eye: Gokuu Midnight Eye: Gokuu -- Furinji Goku is a detective who has an "eye of god". -- -- While he was investigating the murder case of his colleague when he had been an officer, he was pressured to stop it by the police executives. However, he continue investigating, and he lost his left eye. When he was about to be killed, a mysterious group helped him and transplant an artificial eye. The eye was a super technological device that connected to the whole computer network in the world, and enabled him to control any computers. -- -- (Source: AnimeNfo) -- -- Licensor: -- Discotek Media, Urban Vision -- OVA - Jan 27, 1989 -- 7,978 6.46
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Net-juu no Susume Special -- -- Signal.MD -- 1 ep -- Web manga -- Game Comedy Romance -- Net-juu no Susume Special Net-juu no Susume Special -- Much to her dismay, Moriko Morioka's computer has broken down. However, not all is lost as she remembers that Yuuta Sakurai is a computer geek, leading Morioka to seek his expertise. But when Sakurai visits to help build her a new computer, hilarity ensues. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Funimation -- Special - Dec 8, 2017 -- 80,610 7.40
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Net-juu no Susume Special -- -- Signal.MD -- 1 ep -- Web manga -- Game Comedy Romance -- Net-juu no Susume Special Net-juu no Susume Special -- Much to her dismay, Moriko Morioka's computer has broken down. However, not all is lost as she remembers that Yuuta Sakurai is a computer geek, leading Morioka to seek his expertise. But when Sakurai visits to help build her a new computer, hilarity ensues. -- -- Special - Dec 8, 2017 -- 80,610 7.40
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Plastic Little -- -- animate Film -- 1 ep -- Original -- Action Adventure Comedy Ecchi Mecha Military Romance Sci-Fi -- Plastic Little Plastic Little -- Set on the planet Yietta, whose colonists make their living by exploiting the planet's unique liquid-gas oceans, Plastic Little begins as the Yietans are finally about to pay off their debts to the Galactic Federation. Unfortunately, there are those who would rather not let Yietta slip through their fingers... -- -- Enter Tita, 17 year old captain of the Cha Cha Maru. Together with her crew, Tita specializes in capturing Yietta's exotic life forms for intergalactic pet shops, but through plain bad luck she finds herself, instead, at the core of a sinister plot to take over Yietta! By rescuing 16 year old Elysse from the very clutches of the military, Tita puts the lives of both herself and her crew in mortal peril... but a girl's got to do what a girl's got to do! -- -- As the plotters mobilize their forces in a desperate bid to retrieve Elysse, whom they believe possesses a vital computer code, Tita must play a dangerous game of tag with an entire army of professional killers! It's Cat and Mouse on a planetwide scale, with one crucial difference: Mice don't shoot back, but Tita's does! -- -- (Source: AnimeNfo) -- -- Licensor: -- ADV Films -- OVA - Mar 21, 1994 -- 12,320 6.13
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Pokemon: Senritsu no Mirage Pokemon -- -- OLM -- 1 ep -- Game -- Adventure Comedy Fantasy Kids -- Pokemon: Senritsu no Mirage Pokemon Pokemon: Senritsu no Mirage Pokemon -- Dr. Yung, an enigmatic Pokémon scientist, has developed a new Mirage system that uses computer data to resurrect extinct Pokémon, like Kabutops and Armaldo. Professor Oak, Ash and his companions show up at the Mirage Mansion at Dr. Yung's invitation, and watch a demonstration of the machine's capabilities. In the middle of a battle between Dr. Yung's Mirage Pokémon and Ash, the machine goes haywire and a Mirage Aerodactyl swoops in and kidnaps Dr. Yung. A man calling himself "The Mirage Master" appears and announces to everyone that the Mirage System can be used to create Pokémon with absolutely no weaknesses. Ash, Misty, and Professor Oak struggle to stop the madman and escape with their lives. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- 4Kids Entertainment, The Pokemon Company International -- ONA - Oct 13, 2006 -- 24,623 6.47
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Pokemon: The Origin -- -- OLM, Production I.G, Xebec -- 4 eps -- Game -- Action Adventure Comedy Fantasy Kids -- Pokemon: The Origin Pokemon: The Origin -- Pokémon are marvelous creatures that come in a variety of types and sizes, with abilities, powers, and personalities as diverse as they are numerous. Doctor Yukinari Ookido has dedicated his life to studying these fascinating beings, that can be caught, trained, traded, and battled against each other. There's only so much he can do from his lab though. With this in mind, Ookido entrusts two young boys with a Pokémon of their own and a computerized encyclopedia to catalog them. One of them, Green, is brash, passionate, slightly arrogant, and Doctor Ookido's own nephew. The other boy, Red, is equally passionate, and filled with a wide-eyed, mildly naive sense of wonder. -- -- Pokémon: The Origin follows Red in his journey through the region of Kanto in his attempt to complete his "Pokédex" by capturing and cataloging all the Pokémon that exist. Along the way he'll discover there's more to himself and his goals than he originally thought. Red will have to put both himself and his Pokémon to the test in special Gyms whose leaders are steps along the way to the Pokémon League, in order to challenge the Elite Four and become a Pokémon League Champion. -- -- Aside from his goals to become a Champion, Red has other problems brewing. There are others who capture and train Pokémon for more sinister reasons, with the infamous criminal organization Team Rocket being one of them. If Red can defeat them, fellow trainers, his rival Green, and wild Pokémon all through Kanto, he just may fulfill his own dream, and Doctor Ookido's as well. -- -- Licensor: -- The Pokemon Company International -- Special - Oct 2, 2013 -- 186,698 7.75
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Pokemon: The Origin -- -- OLM, Production I.G, Xebec -- 4 eps -- Game -- Action Adventure Comedy Fantasy Kids -- Pokemon: The Origin Pokemon: The Origin -- Pokémon are marvelous creatures that come in a variety of types and sizes, with abilities, powers, and personalities as diverse as they are numerous. Doctor Yukinari Ookido has dedicated his life to studying these fascinating beings, that can be caught, trained, traded, and battled against each other. There's only so much he can do from his lab though. With this in mind, Ookido entrusts two young boys with a Pokémon of their own and a computerized encyclopedia to catalog them. One of them, Green, is brash, passionate, slightly arrogant, and Doctor Ookido's own nephew. The other boy, Red, is equally passionate, and filled with a wide-eyed, mildly naive sense of wonder. -- -- Pokémon: The Origin follows Red in his journey through the region of Kanto in his attempt to complete his "Pokédex" by capturing and cataloging all the Pokémon that exist. Along the way he'll discover there's more to himself and his goals than he originally thought. Red will have to put both himself and his Pokémon to the test in special Gyms whose leaders are steps along the way to the Pokémon League, in order to challenge the Elite Four and become a Pokémon League Champion. -- -- Aside from his goals to become a Champion, Red has other problems brewing. There are others who capture and train Pokémon for more sinister reasons, with the infamous criminal organization Team Rocket being one of them. If Red can defeat them, fellow trainers, his rival Green, and wild Pokémon all through Kanto, he just may fulfill his own dream, and Doctor Ookido's as well. -- Special - Oct 2, 2013 -- 186,698 7.75
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Sasami-san@Ganbaranai -- -- Shaft -- 12 eps -- Light novel -- Comedy Romance Supernatural -- Sasami-san@Ganbaranai Sasami-san@Ganbaranai -- The Japanese call them hikikomori—people who've become so withdrawn socially that they refuse to leave their homes for weeks and even months at a time. For Sasami Tsukuyomi, who's attempting to pass her first year of high school despite being a shut in, it's more than just a word. Fortunately though, she lives with her older brother Kamiomi, who just happens to be a teacher at the school Sasami is supposed to attend. Not to mention, her "Brother Surveillance Tool" which lets her view the outside world via her computer and will, theoretically, allow her to readjust to interfacing with people again. What it mainly does, however, is let her view her brother's interactions with the three very odd Yagami sisters, who inexplicably seem to have had their ages reversed and have various types of "interest" in Kamiomi. And then things start to get really weird... Magical powers? Everything turning into chocolate? Is life via the web warping Sasami's brain, or is it the universe that's going crazy? -- -- (Source: Sentai Filmworks) -- 74,433 6.68
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Shin Megami Tensei: Tokyo Mokushiroku -- -- J.C.Staff -- 2 eps -- Manga -- Action Sci-Fi Horror Demons Supernatural -- Shin Megami Tensei: Tokyo Mokushiroku Shin Megami Tensei: Tokyo Mokushiroku -- Handsome and effeminate, quiet but proud, the sinister Akito Kobayashi has a passion for the occult and has developed a computer program to summon demons and the living dead. But little does he know that fellow high school students Kojirou Souma and Saki Yagami are reincarnations of powerful and benevolent spirits. When the pair's friends have become targeted by demons trying to harvest their life energies, they must harness their dark metaphysical powers to destroy Kobayashi's threatening program, or risk losing their loved ones forever. -- -- OVA - Apr 21, 1995 -- 5,519 5.41
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Sister Princess -- -- Zexcs -- 26 eps -- Light novel -- Comedy Drama Harem Romance Slice of Life -- Sister Princess Sister Princess -- Wataru Minakami is a top student who failed his high school entrance exam because of a computer glitch. He later discovered that he was accepted to Stargazer Hill Academy, which is located at a mysterious place called Promised Island. At the request of his father, Wataru is whisked away to the island, and before he can settle in, a dozen of cute and charming girls start to flock him and claim to be his younger sisters. As Wataru gets closer to his newfound siblings, a deeper mystery as to why they were sent to the island comes to play. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- ADV Films, Discotek Media -- TV - Apr 4, 2001 -- 21,313 6.41
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Soukihei MD Geist -- -- Zero-G Room -- 1 ep -- Original -- Action Military Sci-Fi Mecha -- Soukihei MD Geist Soukihei MD Geist -- In the distant future, mankind has colonized other planets in the universe. While many planets lived in peace, the planet Jerra has been ravaged by decades of war. Geist is an M.D.S. (Most Dangerous Soldier), an enhanced human with unsurpassed combat capabilities and an insatiable lust for battle. Because of his uncontrollable nature, Geist is cryogenically frozen and locked in a satellite. Several years later, the satellite crashes and Geist wakes up from his sleep to engage in another war. This time, to help the army stop the planet's central computer from activating a doomsday device that will lead to total annihilation of all life on Jerra. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- ADV Films, Central Park Media -- OVA - May 21, 1986 -- 13,229 5.32
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SSSS.Gridman -- -- Trigger -- 12 eps -- Original -- Action Sci-Fi Mecha -- SSSS.Gridman SSSS.Gridman -- Yuuta Hibiki wakes up in the room of Rikka Takarada and notices two things: he has no memories, and he can hear a mysterious voice calling his name from a nearby room. On further inspection, he finds a robot—which introduces itself as Hyper Agent Gridman—behind the screen of an old computer. Much to Yuuta's surprise, Rikka cannot hear Gridman, nor can she see the ominous monsters looming over a thick fog as it envelopes the town outside. -- -- Another giant monster materializes in the city and proceeds to wreak havoc. Amidst the confusion, Yuuta is once again drawn to the old computer and merges with Gridman. Suddenly, he appears in the middle of the battle and is forced to fight the monster. Together with Rikka and fellow classmate Shou Utsumi, Yuuta forms the "Gridman Alliance" to defeat the monsters plaguing the city and find whoever is responsible for their emergence. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Funimation -- 213,180 7.17
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Tekkon Kinkreet Pilot -- -- - -- 1 ep -- Manga -- Action Adventure Psychological Supernatural -- Tekkon Kinkreet Pilot Tekkon Kinkreet Pilot -- Softimage's Michael Arias started the project as a short CG exercise, which then came to the attention of Morimoto, who then agreed to work on the project on the Softimage 3D software. A few months later, Visual Director Wilson Tang and Animation Supervisor Lee Fulton introduced a pilot to the Softimage staff, made entirely on computer with a staff of only 12. The pilot won the Excellence Award at the 3rd Japan Media Arts Festival in the Digital Art Division. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- Special - Jan 1, 1999 -- 1,329 4.68
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Terra e... -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Manga -- Action Drama Sci-Fi Shounen Space -- Terra e... Terra e... -- In the five hundred years since Earth's environment was destroyed and the planet came to be known as Terra, humans have created a society in space that is entirely logical. Supercomputers control the government, babies are grown in artificial wombs and assigned parents randomly, and at age 14, children take an "Adulthood Exam." Humanity's greatest enemy is the "Mu"—humans who have developed into espers. -- -- When Jomy Marquis Shin's birthday arrives and the time comes for him to take his Adulthood Exam, he is shocked to learn that all of his childhood memories are going to be erased. Suddenly, he hears the voice of Soldier Blue, the leader of the Mu, calling out to him to hold onto his memories. -- -- Jomy makes his escape on a Mu ship and is shocked to learn that he himself is an esper and that the government has sentenced him to death. Nearing the end of his life, Soldier Blue transfers his memories to Jomy and names him the next leader of the Mu. Now, Jomy has a choice: keep the Mu in hiding, or declare war on humanity to realize their dream of returning to Terra. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Nozomi Entertainment -- Movie - Apr 26, 1980 -- 8,478 6.46
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Terra e... (TV) -- -- Minami Machi Bugyousho, Tokyo Kids -- 24 eps -- Manga -- Action Military Sci-Fi Space Drama Shounen -- Terra e... (TV) Terra e... (TV) -- In the future, humans are living on colonized planets and are controlled in every aspect of their life by a system of computers. Evolution has resulted in the birth of people with extraordinary powers. This new race is called Mu. Hated and feared by the humans, the Mu dream of a place to live in peace: Earth—a mystical far away planet—for humanity had to leave their home long ago as pollution and destruction increased and made it impossible to stay there any longer. -- -- Jomy is a boy excitedly awaiting his birthday, the day he will enter the world of adults. Yet he knows nothing about the unknown powers sleeping in him and the shared dream of returning to Earth one day. -- -- Licensor: -- Bandai Entertainment -- 54,008 7.92
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The Animatrix -- -- Madhouse, Studio 4°C -- 9 eps -- Other -- Action Drama Sci-Fi -- The Animatrix The Animatrix -- 1. Final Flight of the Osiris -- The crew of the Osiris discover an army preparing to invade Zion. While one crew member races inside the Matrix to get the message to Zion, the others try desperately to buy her enough time while fighting off an onslaught of Sentinels they can't possibly defeat. -- -- 2-3. The Second Renaissance Part 1 and 2 -- Humans have created the ultimate AI, which is just as smart as they are. But complications arise when these robots and the humans try to exist peacefully, and eventually all-out war breaks out. The humans ultimately lose the war, and become trapped in the Matrix as seen in the live-action films. -- -- 4. Kid's Story -- A young man discovers that his world isn't real, that it's a computer-generated fantasy land created by robots using humans for energy. He escapes with the help of the hacker Neo. Based on the Matrix trilogy. -- -- 5. Program -- Cis and Duo engage in battle in a virtual recreation of Feudal Japan. -- -- 6. World Record -- While running the fastest race in his life, a champion track star breaks free of his computer-generated world for a small period of time. When he goes back to the real world, he has no memories and is placed in a nursing home. Based on the Matrix trilogy. -- -- 7. Beyond -- While looking for her lost pet, a young woman meets up with some kids in Tokyo to play in a "haunted house," which is really a glitch in their computer world. Based on the Matrix trilogy. -- -- 8. Detective Story -- A detective named Ash is called upon by a mysterious organization to hunt down the notorious hacker Trinity. -- -- 9. Matriculated -- A group of scientists capture a robot and place it in a surreal fantasy world. When the robot's friends come in and kill most of the scientists; however, the robot and the last scientist remaining face isolation in the computer-generated world. Based on the Matrix trilogy. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- -- Licensor: -- Warner Bros. Japan -- OVA - Jun 3, 2003 -- 66,027 7.30
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The Animatrix -- -- Madhouse, Studio 4°C -- 9 eps -- Other -- Action Drama Sci-Fi -- The Animatrix The Animatrix -- 1. Final Flight of the Osiris -- The crew of the Osiris discover an army preparing to invade Zion. While one crew member races inside the Matrix to get the message to Zion, the others try desperately to buy her enough time while fighting off an onslaught of Sentinels they can't possibly defeat. -- -- 2-3. The Second Renaissance Part 1 and 2 -- Humans have created the ultimate AI, which is just as smart as they are. But complications arise when these robots and the humans try to exist peacefully, and eventually all-out war breaks out. The humans ultimately lose the war, and become trapped in the Matrix as seen in the live-action films. -- -- 4. Kid's Story -- A young man discovers that his world isn't real, that it's a computer-generated fantasy land created by robots using humans for energy. He escapes with the help of the hacker Neo. Based on the Matrix trilogy. -- -- 5. Program -- Cis and Duo engage in battle in a virtual recreation of Feudal Japan. -- -- 6. World Record -- While running the fastest race in his life, a champion track star breaks free of his computer-generated world for a small period of time. When he goes back to the real world, he has no memories and is placed in a nursing home. Based on the Matrix trilogy. -- -- 7. Beyond -- While looking for her lost pet, a young woman meets up with some kids in Tokyo to play in a "haunted house," which is really a glitch in their computer world. Based on the Matrix trilogy. -- -- 8. Detective Story -- A detective named Ash is called upon by a mysterious organization to hunt down the notorious hacker Trinity. -- -- 9. Matriculated -- A group of scientists capture a robot and place it in a surreal fantasy world. When the robot's friends come in and kill most of the scientists; however, the robot and the last scientist remaining face isolation in the computer-generated world. Based on the Matrix trilogy. -- -- (Source: ANN) -- OVA - Jun 3, 2003 -- 66,027 7.30
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The Impression of First Gundam -- -- Sunrise -- 1 ep -- - -- Action Mecha Military Sci-Fi Space -- The Impression of First Gundam The Impression of First Gundam -- Screened together with Gundam: Mission to the Rise at Gundam's 20th Anniversary event "Gundam Big Bang Sengen" in Pacifico Yokohama National Convention Hall. -- -- Selected scenes from Kidou Senshi Gundam were re-edited for three giant projection screens to give the widescreen feel to the original 4:3 aspect footage. They were also computer synchronized to sweeping lights and lasers to simulate space battles. The soundtrack was remixed for six-channel surround sound. -- -- (Source: AniDB) -- Special - Aug 1, 1998 -- 1,425 5.41
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The Third: Aoi Hitomi no Shoujo -- -- Xebec -- 24 eps -- Light novel -- Action Adventure Sci-Fi Seinen -- The Third: Aoi Hitomi no Shoujo The Third: Aoi Hitomi no Shoujo -- In the distant future, because of an interplanetary war that had continued on for centuries, civilizations were ruined. Human beings have lost everything, and only 1/5th of the population survived. A strange breed of humans, ''The Third'' is said to have appeared just after the war. They possess a third eye, as their name suggests, that appear as oval-shaped red pupils called "space eyes'' over their conventional two eyes. Using them, they can control computer systems and so on, and as such, rule the world by their superior power over technology. -- -- In this world, there is a young woman named Honoka; she is a "jack-of-all-trades" sellsword, and she accepts any job except murder. One day, she happens to find and rescue a young man named Ikus in the desert. Entering his world, and accepting a job from him, the adventure begins for Honoka and Ikus. -- -- (Source: BestAnime, modified) -- -- Licensor: -- Kadokawa Pictures USA, Nozomi Entertainment -- TV - Apr 14, 2006 -- 19,122 7.32
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Ultra Maniac -- -- Production Reed -- 26 eps -- Manga -- Comedy Magic Romance School Shoujo -- Ultra Maniac Ultra Maniac -- Fantasies and miracles never interested Ayu Tateishi, a popular second-year student at her middle school. She was content with preserving her image of being cool, calm, and collected—all to catch the eye of her crush, Tetsushi Kaji. Ayu's carefree youthful days are interrupted by the appearance of Nina Sakura, a new transfer student who turns out to be a witch. As the only person who knows about Nina's ability to cast spells using a mini-computer, Ayu is forced to help Nina with her mission to find the five Holy Stones, qualifying her to marry the prince of the Magic Kingdom. -- -- Unfortunately, Nina's ineptitude with magic and her habit of meddling in Ayu's personal life cause nothing but trouble for the two of them as Ayu toils to maintain her good reputation and Nina struggles to hide her secret from the discerning eye of Hiroki Tsujiai, Tetsushi's best friend and an avid fan of manga. And when Nina's search for the five Holy Stones brings allies and challengers from the Magic Kingdom, Ayu is dragged into a world she never even dreamed was possible. -- -- 28,255 7.17
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Visions of Frank: Short Films by Japan's Most Audacious Animators -- -- - -- 9 eps -- - -- Dementia -- Visions of Frank: Short Films by Japan's Most Audacious Animators Visions of Frank: Short Films by Japan's Most Audacious Animators -- A series of 9 animated shorts based on the Frank comics by Jim Woodring, featuring computer/CGI, traditional cel, stop-motion, and even sand painting techniques. Contributing animators and musicians include COCOA, Eri Yoshimura, Naomi Nagata, TAMAPRO/DROP, Taruto Fuyama, Masaki Maito, Kanako Kawagushi, Masaya Sakaue, Bill Frisell, Dame Darcy, and Woodring himself. -- OVA - Nov 25, 2005 -- 634 5.80
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Youjuu Sensen Adventure Kid -- -- - -- 3 eps -- Manga -- Fantasy Hentai Demons Horror -- Youjuu Sensen Adventure Kid Youjuu Sensen Adventure Kid -- Episode 1: A young man named Norikazu finds a computer from World War II buried in his back garden. When he activates it, he and a girl named Midori are transported to Hell where erotic creatures and monsters of different kinds live. They meet some friends including a sexy elf type woman named Eganko who falls in love with Norikazu, and a perverted monster prince who is soon enslaved by Midori. Using their new friends the pair try to make the dangerous journey back home. -- -- Episode 2: Having made their way back home the adventure duo find the world they knew is gone, and is now ruled by the demonic computer which first sent them to Hell. They travel back in time to World War II Japan in an attempt to stop the world from being changed. Notably, in doing so they witness the atomic bomb being dropped on Hiroshima, and there is an appearance of the Enola Gay, as well as numerous symbols of Japanese culture at the time. -- -- Episode 3: This episode has a humorous love-quadrangle plot, where Eganko comes up with a plan to make Norikazu fall in love with her with a love potion, and simultaneously make Midori fall in love with an egotistical young man from her school. Unsurprisingly their plan backfires and everyone gets what they deserve. -- -- (Source: Wikipedia) -- -- Licensor: -- Central Park Media -- OVA - Jul 21, 1992 -- 1,944 5.33
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https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/List_of_applications#3D_computer_graphics
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https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/List_of_applications#Computer-aided_design
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https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/List_of_applications#Computer_algebra_system
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https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/List_of_applications#Computer_science
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Christofari_supercomputer
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Computer_Aided_Process_Planning_(CAPP)
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Computer_graphics_by_type
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Computers
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Computer_science
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Computer_science_diagrams
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Media_from_IPSJ_Transactions_on_Computer_Vision_and_Applications
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Religious_computer_icons
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Featured_pictures/Non-photographic_media/Computer-generated
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Structured_data/Computer-aided_tagging
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User_talk:ComputerHotline
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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Computerjoe
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1260 (computer virus)
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2012 RBS Group computer system problems
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2D computer graphics
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3B series computers
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3D computer graphics
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3M computer
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AAA (computer security)
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Aarhus University Department of Computer Science
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ABC (computer virus)
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Abraxas (computer virus)
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Abstraction (computer science)
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Abstraction principle (computer programming)
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Access Computer College
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Accounting method (computer science)
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Acid (computer virus)
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Acme (computer virus)
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ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction
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ACM Transactions on Computer Systems
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Acorn Business Computer
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Acorn Computers
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Acorn Network Computer
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Actifed (computer virus)
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Action at a distance (computer programming)
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Actrix (computer)
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Ada (computer virus)
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Adaptation (computer science)
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Adele Goldberg (computer scientist)
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Adrian Walker (computer scientist)
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Advanced Computer Techniques
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Advances in Electrical and Computer Engineering
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Affiliated Computer Services
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African-American women in computer science
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Agat (computer)
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AI (computer virus)
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AIDS (computer virus)
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Air data computer
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AIS Transactions on Human-Computer Interaction
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Akavan Erityisalojen Keskusliitto AEK ry v Fujitsu Siemens Computers Oy
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Alan Newell (English computer scientist)
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Alcon (computer virus)
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Alcra (computer worm)
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Aleksandar Nikolov (computer scientist)
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Alembic (computer graphics)
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Aliens: The Computer Game (1986 video game)
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Aliens: The Computer Game (1987 video game)
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Al-Khawarizmi Institute of Computer Science
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Alliant Computer Systems
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All India Society for Electronics and Computer Technology
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AMA Computer University
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AMBRA Computer Corporation
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AMC computerized engine control
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American Computer & Robotics Museum
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Amstrad Computer User
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Analog computer
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Andrew Martin (computer scientist)
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Andrew Morton (computer programmer)
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Andrew Stone (computer programmer)
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Animal-computer interaction
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Animex International Festival of Animation and Computer Games
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Anna Kournikova (computer virus)
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Anti-computer forensics
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Anti-computer tactics
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Antonn Svoboda (computer scientist)
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ANU College of Engineering and Computer Science
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AP Computer Science
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AP Computer Science A
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AP Computer Science Principles
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Apollo Computer
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Apollo Guidance Computer
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Apple Computer, Inc. v. Franklin Computer Corp.
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Apple Computer Inc v Mackintosh Computers Ltd
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Apple Computer, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp.
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Apple Corps v Apple Computer
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Apricot Computers
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APUS (computer)
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Areal density (computer storage)
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ARITH Symposium on Computer Arithmetic
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Arrow (computer science)
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Arthur Norman (computer scientist)
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Artificial Linguistic Internet Computer Entity
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Arvind Gupta (computer scientist)
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Aspect (computer programming)
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Assessment in computer-supported collaborative learning
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Asset (computer security)
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Assignment (computer science)
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Association for Computer Aided Design In Architecture
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Association for Computers and the Humanities
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Association of Personal Computer User Groups
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Association of Professional, Executive, Clerical and Computer Staff
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Asynchrony (computer programming)
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AtanasoffBerry computer
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Atari 8-bit computer peripherals
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Atlantic Computers
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Atlas (computer)
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ATM (computer)
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Aurora (supercomputer)
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Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education
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Australian Computers in Education Conference
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Australian Computer Society
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Automatic Digital Computer M-1
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Aviation Industry Computer-Based Training Committee
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Axiom (computer algebra system)
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Bachelor of Computer Information Systems
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Bachelor of Computer Science
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Bagle (computer worm)
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Bag-of-words model in computer vision
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Bandelet (computer science)
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Bangladesh Computer Society
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Barebone computer
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BARK (computer)
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Barrier (computer science)
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BASIC Computer Games
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Bass Computer
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BBC Computer Literacy Project 2012
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Behat (computer science)
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Bell's law of computer classes
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Bill Buchanan (computer scientist)
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Bill English (computer engineer)
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Billiard-ball computer
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Bill Paxton (computer scientist)
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Black hat (computer security)
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Blaster (computer worm)
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Bleeping Computer
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Blit (computer terminal)
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Blue Meanies (Apple Computer)
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Board representation (computer chess)
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Book:Computer Science
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Bose computer speakers
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Bradford (computer program)
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Braincomputer interface
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Brain (computer virus)
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Branch (computer science)
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Brazilian Computer Society
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Brian Reid (computer scientist)
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British Colloquium for Theoretical Computer Science
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British Computer Society
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British Computer Society Young Professionals Group
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Brooklyn College Center for Computer Music
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Bruce Woodcock (computer games analyst)
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Cabir (computer worm)
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California Pacific Computer Company
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Callback (computer programming)
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Cambridge Diploma in Computer Science
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Cambridge Ring (computer network)
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Canadian Trusted Computer Product Evaluation Criteria
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CAP computer
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Carroll Morgan (computer scientist)
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Cascade (computer virus)
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Casino (computer virus)
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Category:Electro-mechanical computers
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Category:Indian computer scientists
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Cavalier Computer
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CDR computerized assessment system
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Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction
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Center for Computer Games Research
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Central Air Data Computer
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Central Computer and Telecommunications Agency
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Centre for Research on Computer Supported Learning and Cognition
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CER Computer
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Certified Forensic Computer Examiner
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Channel system (computer science)
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Chaos Computer Club
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Charles R. Moore (computer engineer)
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Charlie Lee (computer scientist)
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Ch (computer programming)
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Cheekah Bow Bow (That Computer Song)
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Chemical computer
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Chen Jin (computer scientist)
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Chess opening book (computers)
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Cheyenne (supercomputer)
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Chinese input methods for computers
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Chinook (computer program)
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CHIP (computer)
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Chris Lilley (computer scientist)
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Christopher Dunn (computer programmer)
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Christopher Evans (computer scientist)
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Chris Wallace (computer scientist)
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Cielo (supercomputer)
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CIFA (computer)
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CIH (computer virus)
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Circuit (computer science)
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Clarence Ellis (computer scientist)
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Class (computer programming)
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Classes of computers
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Cliff Jones (computer scientist)
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Clipping (computer graphics)
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C-list (computer security)
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Closure (computer programming)
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CMS Computers
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Coalescing (computer science)
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Code Red (computer worm)
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Cognitive computer
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Cohesion (computer science)
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Collection of Computer Science Bibliographies
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Collision (computer science)
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Colossus computer
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Columbia (supercomputer)
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Comment (computer programming)
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Communications, Computers, and Networks
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Community of interest (computer security)
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Comparison of 3D computer graphics software
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Comparison of computer-aided design software
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Comparison of computer-assisted translation tools
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Comparison of computer viruses
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Comparison of embedded computer systems on board the Mars rovers
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Comparison of tablet computers
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Complex instruction set computer
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Computer
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Computer accessibility
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Computeractive
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Computer-adaptive sequential testing
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Computer addiction
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Computer-aided
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Computer-aided architectural design
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Computer-aided architectural engineering
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Computer-aided assessment
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Computer-aided audit tools
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Computer-aided auscultation
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Computer-aided call handling
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Computer-aided design
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Computer-aided diagnosis
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Computer-aided dispatch
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Computer-aided engineering
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Computer-aided facility management
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Computer-aided garden design
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Computer-aided lean management
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Computer-aided management of emergency operations
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Computer-aided manufacturing
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Computer-aided mural
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Computer-aided process planning
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Computer-aided production engineering
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Computer-aided quality assurance
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Computer-aided software engineering
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Computer Aided Surgery (journal)
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Computer-aided technologies
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Computer Aided Verification
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Computer Aid International
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Computer algebra
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Computer algebra system
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Computer & Communications Industry Association
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Computer analyst
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Computer and Internet Protocol Address Verifier
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Computer and network surveillance
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Computer and Video Games
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Computer animation
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Computer Animation Production System
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Computer appliance
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Computer architecture
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Computer architecture simulator
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Computer art
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Computer art scene
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Computer Arts Society
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Computer-assisted gaming
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Computer-assisted interventions
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Computer-assisted language learning
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Computer-assisted legal research
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Computer-assisted orthopedic surgery
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Computer-Assisted Passenger Prescreening System
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Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System II
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Computer-assisted personal interviewing
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Computer-assisted proof
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Computer-assisted qualitative data analysis software
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Computer-assisted reporting
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Computer-assisted structure elucidation
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Computer-assisted surgery
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Computer-assisted survey information collection
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Computer-assisted telephone interviewing
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Computer-assisted translation
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Computer-assisted web interviewing
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Computer Associates International, Inc. v. Altai, Inc.
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Computer Atlas of Surface Topography of Proteins
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Computer audio
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Computer audition
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Computer-automated design
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Computer Automated Measurement and Control
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Computer-based interlocking
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Computer-Based Math
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Computer-based mathematics education
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Computer-based test interpretation in psychological assessment
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Computer Bild
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Computer Bismarck
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Computer booking system
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Computer bridge
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Computer bureau
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Computer case
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Computer case screws
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Computer chess
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Computer Chess (film)
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Computer Chronicles
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Computer City
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Computer club
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Computer cluster
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Computer compatibility
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Computer component
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Computer conferencing
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Computer configuration
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Computer connection
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Computer Conservation Society
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Computer console
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Computer Consoles Inc.
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Computer Control Company
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Computer Controlled Acoustic Instruments pt2
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Computer cooling
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ComputerCop
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Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section
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Computer data storage
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Computer desk
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Computer display standard
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Computer Doctor
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Computer Engineer Barbie
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Computer engineering
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Computer Engineers Association of Spain
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Computer Entertainment Rating Organization
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Computer ethics
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Computer experiment
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Computer facial animation
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Computer fan
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Computer fan control
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Computer file
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Computer font
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Computer forensics
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Computer form factor
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Computer fraud
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Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
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Computer game bot Turing Test
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Computer Games Magazine
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Computer Games (song)
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Computer Gaming World
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Computer-generated
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Computer-generated choreography
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Computer-generated holography
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Computer-generated imagery
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Computer Go
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Computer Go UEC Cup
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Computer graphics
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Computer graphics (computer science)
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Computer graphics (disambiguation)
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Computer graphics lighting
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Computer Graphics Metafile
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Computer Graphics (newsletter)
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Computer Graphics: Principles and Practice
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Computer hardware
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Computer History Museum
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Computer Hope
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Computer humour
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Computer image
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Computer-induced medical problems
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Computer in Love
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Computer-integrated manufacturing
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Computerised National Identity Card
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Computerize
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Computerized Achievement Levels Test
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Computerized adaptive testing
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Computerized Airline Sales and Marketing Association
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Computerized Criminal History
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Computerized maintenance management system
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Computerized physician order entry
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Computerized Systems Used In Clinical Trials
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Computer Jagat
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Computer (job description)
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Computer keyboard
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Computer lab
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Computer Laboratory
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ComputerLand
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Computer language
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Computer Law & Security Review
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Computer Lib/Dream Machines
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Computer liquidator
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Computer literacy
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Computer Literacy Bookshops
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Computer lock
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Computer Love
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Computer Love (Kraftwerk song)
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Computer Love (Zapp song)
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Computer magazine
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Computer (magazine)
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Computer maintenance
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Computerman (web series)
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Computer mapping
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Computer mathematics
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Computer Measurement Group
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Computer-mediated communication
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Computer-mediated reality
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Computer Memories Inc.
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Computer memory
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Computer Misuse Act 1990
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Computer Modelling Group
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Computer Modern
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Computer monitor
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Computer mouse
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Computer multitasking
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Computer museum
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Computer music
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Computer Music Center
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Computer Music Journal
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Computer network
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Computer network naming scheme
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Computer network operations
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Computer network programming
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Computer Networks (journal)
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Computer number format
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Computer Olympiad
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Computer Online Forensic Evidence Extractor
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Computer-on-module
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Computer operator
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Computer Othello
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Computer People for Peace
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Computer performance
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Computer performance by orders of magnitude
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Computer Peripherals
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Computer Physics Communications
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Computer Pioneer Award
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Computer port (hardware)
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Computer Power and Human Reason
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Computer processing of body language
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Computer Professionals' Union
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Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
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Computer program
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Computer programming
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Computer programming in the punched card era
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Computer program product
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Computer programs and the Patent Cooperation Treaty
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Computer Programs Directive
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Computer rage
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Computer recycling
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Computer repair technician
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Computer representation of surfaces
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Computer Research Center of Islamic Sciences
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Computer reservation system
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Computer room
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Computer Russification
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Computers & Chemical Engineering
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Computers and Intractability
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Computers and Mathematics with Applications
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Computers and Structures (company)
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Computers and Typesetting
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Computers are social actors
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Computer science
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Computer science and engineering
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Computer Science (journal)
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Computer Science Ontology
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Computer Sciences
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Computer Sciences Corporation
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Computer Science Undergraduate Association
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Computer scientist
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ComputerScope
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Computer security
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Computer Security Act of 1987
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Computer security conference
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Computer security incident management
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Computer security model
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Computer security software
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Computer Service Directorate
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Computers, Freedom and Privacy Conference
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Computershare
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Computer shogi
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Computer Shopper
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Computer Shopper (US magazine)
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Computer simulation
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Computer simulation and organizational studies
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Computers in Biology and Medicine
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Computers in Entertainment
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Computers in Human Behavior
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Computers in the classroom
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Computer Society of India
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Computer Society of Southern Africa
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Computer Society of Sri Lanka
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Computer Space
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Computer Space forum
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Computer speakers
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Computerspielemuseum Berlin
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Computer stereo vision
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Computer Stored Ambulatory Record
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Computer supported brainstorming
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Computer-supported collaboration
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Computer-supported collaborative learning
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Computer-supported cooperative work
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Computer-supported telecommunications applications
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Computer Systems Research Group
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Computer tape
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Computer Task Group
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Computer technology for developing areas
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Computer Technology Limited
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Computer telephony integration
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Computer terminal
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Computer to film
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Computer to plate
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Computer!Totaal
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ComputerTown UK
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Computer trespass
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Computer University, Thaton
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Computer virus
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Computervision
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Computer vision
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Computer vision dazzle
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Computer vision syndrome
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Computer wargame
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Computer Warriors
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Computer Weekly
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Computer widow
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Computer World
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Computerworld
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Computerworld Smithsonian Award
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Computer worm
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Computer Zeitung
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Comteq Computer and Business College
|
Concepts, Techniques, and Models of Computer Programming
|
Conceptual model (computer science)
|
Concern (computer science)
|
Concurrency (computer science)
|
Conditional (computer programming)
|
Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
|
Consensus (computer science)
|
Console (computer games)
|
Constant (computer programming)
|
Const (computer programming)
|
Consumer braincomputer interfaces
|
Convex Computer
|
Convolution (computer science)
|
Cookie Monster (computer program)
|
Correctness (computer science)
|
Corvette (computer)
|
Cotton Candy (single-board computer)
|
Coupling (computer programming)
|
Covariance and contravariance (computer science)
|
Crossbar (computer hardware manufacturer)
|
Cyclocomputer
|
Cyclone (computer)
|
Dalhousie University Faculty of Computer Science
|
Dan Connolly (computer scientist)
|
Daniel A. Reed (computer scientist)
|
Daniel Murphy (computer scientist)
|
Daniel Robbins (computer programmer)
|
Danny Cohen (computer scientist)
|
Data General Corp. v. Digital Computer Controls, Inc.
|
Dave Cliff (computer scientist)
|
David Abrahams (computer programmer)
|
David Bader (computer scientist)
|
David Baron (computer scientist)
|
David Hartley (computer scientist)
|
David May (computer scientist)
|
David Patterson (computer scientist)
|
David Pearson (computer scientist)
|
David Peleg (computer scientist)
|
David Perry (computer specialist)
|
David Silver (computer scientist)
|
David Turner (computer scientist)
|
David Watt (computer scientist)
|
David Wheeler (computer scientist)
|
David Zuckerman (computer scientist)
|
Dc (computer program)
|
Decimal computer
|
Declaration (computer programming)
|
Decomposition (computer science)
|
DEC Professional (computer)
|
Deep Blue (chess computer)
|
Default (computer science)
|
De La Salle University College of Computer Studies
|
Delegation (computer security)
|
Department of Computer Engineering, University of Peradeniya
|
Department of Computer Science and Technology, University of Cambridge
|
Department of Computer Science, FMPI, Comenius University
|
Department of Computer Science, Stony Brook University
|
Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
|
Department of Computer Science, University of Manchester
|
Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford
|
Department of Electronics and Accreditation of Computer Classes
|
Derive (computer algebra system)
|
Desktop computer
|
Desktop replacement computer
|
Destructor (computer programming)
|
DigiBarn Computer Museum
|
Digital electronic computer
|
Dilution of precision (computer graphics)
|
Diploma in Computer Science
|
Dirty Computer
|
Discrete Mathematics & Theoretical Computer Science
|
Distinguished Fellow of the British Computer Society
|
Dive computer
|
Divergence (computer science)
|
Doctor of Computer Science
|
Doel (computer)
|
Dovetailing (computer science)
|
Draft:Bass Computer (album)
|
Draft:International Journal of Computer Science and Mobile Computing
|
Draft:Joe Sullivan (computer security)
|
Draft:Ying Zheng (computer scientist)
|
Dr. A. Q. Khan Institute of Computer Sciences and Information Technology
|
DRTE Computer
|
Dungeons & Dragons Computer Fantasy Game
|
Dungeons & Dragons Computer Labyrinth Game
|
Eagle Computer
|
EckertMauchly Computer Corporation
|
Edinburgh Concurrent Supercomputer
|
Ed Roberts (computer engineer)
|
Elbrus (computer)
|
Electrical computer
|
Electron (computer hacker)
|
Electronic Fun with Computers & Games
|
Electronic Letters on Computer Vision and Image Analysis
|
Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science
|
Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
|
Elektor Junior Computer
|
Elektor TV Games Computer
|
Elitegroup Computer Systems
|
Elliott Brothers (computer company)
|
Ellipsis (computer programming)
|
Emma Hart (computer scientist)
|
Encapsulation (computer programming)
|
Endless Computers
|
Enterprise (computer)
|
Enumerator (computer science)
|
Epoch Game Pocket Computer
|
Erik Meijer (computer scientist)
|
Escom (computer company)
|
European Association for Computer-Assisted Language Learning
|
European Association for Theoretical Computer Science
|
European Computer Driving Licence
|
European Conference on Computer Vision
|
Everex green computer
|
Exploit (computer security)
|
Expression (computer science)
|
Expressive power (computer science)
|
FACT (computer language)
|
Family Computer Network System
|
Fast Tracks: The Computer Slot Car Construction Kit
|
FCC Computer Inquiries
|
Feature (computer vision)
|
Feature detection (computer vision)
|
Federal Computer Week
|
Feni Computer Institute
|
Fermat (computer algebra system)
|
Fiber (computer science)
|
Field (computer science)
|
Fifth generation computer
|
Firefly (computer program)
|
Flight computer
|
Flit (computer networking)
|
Flooding (computer networking)
|
Florida Atlantic University College of Engineering and Computer Science
|
Fly (pentop computer)
|
Foundations and Trends in Computer Graphics and Vision
|
Foundations and Trends in Theoretical Computer Science
|
Fragment (computer graphics)
|
Fred the Computer
|
French Institute for Research in Computer Science and Automation
|
Frontiers of Computer Science
|
Frontier (supercomputer)
|
Frosty Treats, Inc. v. Sony Computer Entertainment America, Inc.
|
Fubar Age of Computer
|
Fujitsu Siemens Computers
|
Fullarton Computer Industries Ltd v Central Arbitration Committee
|
Full disclosure (computer security)
|
Function composition (computer science)
|
Fundamental matrix (computer vision)
|
Gadget (computer science)
|
Galaksija (computer)
|
Games Computers Play
|
Gaming computer
|
GAP (computer algebra system)
|
Garbage collection (computer science)
|
Garbage (computer science)
|
Gary Miller (computer scientist)
|
Gates Computer Science Building, Stanford
|
Gautam Das (computer scientist)
|
Gavin Lowe (computer scientist)
|
Geac Computer Corporation
|
Gemini Guidance Computer
|
General Computer Corporation
|
General purpose analog computer
|
Generator (computer programming)
|
Genetic improvement (computer science)
|
George Morrow (computers)
|
Georgia Tech Online Master of Science in Computer Science
|
Ghostball (computer virus)
|
Giochi per il mio computer
|
Glossary of computer chess terms
|
Glossary of computer graphics
|
Glossary of computer hardware terms
|
Glossary of computer software terms
|
Glow (Jackson and His Computerband album)
|
Goal node (computer science)
|
Golden Oldies: Volume 1 - Computer Software Classics
|
Graph cuts in computer vision
|
Greg Nelson (computer scientist)
|
Gregor von Bochmann (computer scientist)
|
Grigore Moisil National College of Computer Science (Braov)
|
GST Computer Systems
|
Guard (computer science)
|
Gun data computer
|
H.100 (computer telephony)
|
Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution
|
HAL Computer Systems
|
Hal Finney (computer scientist)
|
Hank Levy (computer scientist)
|
Hare (computer virus)
|
Harvard Computers
|
Harvard Laboratory for Computer Graphics and Spatial Analysis
|
Harwell computer
|
Hauppauge Computer Works
|
Hayes Microcomputer Products
|
Hazard (computer architecture)
|
Headless computer
|
Henry Baker (computer scientist)
|
Hercules Computer Technology
|
Heuristic (computer science)
|
High-level language computer architecture
|
High-water mark (computer security)
|
History of automated adaptive instruction in computer applications
|
History of computer hardware in Soviet Bloc countries
|
History of computer hardware in Yugoslavia
|
History of personal computers
|
History of tablet computers
|
Hitit Computer Services
|
Homebrew computer
|
Homebrew Computer Club
|
Homebuilt computer
|
Home computer
|
Hot spot (computer programming)
|
How to Solve it by Computer
|
Hui Zhang (computer scientist)
|
Human biocomputer
|
Humancomputer chess matches
|
Humancomputer information retrieval
|
Humancomputer interaction
|
Human-Computer Interaction Institute
|
Humancomputer interaction (security)
|
Husky (computer)
|
Hybris (computer worm)
|
Hylomorphism (computer science)
|
Hyperion (computer)
|
Ian Clarke (computer scientist)
|
Ian Munro (computer scientist)
|
IBM 4020 Military Computer
|
IBM Advanced Computer Systems project
|
IBM Personal Computer
|
IBM Personal Computer/AT
|
IBM Personal Computer XT
|
IBM Portable Personal Computer
|
ICON (microcomputer)
|
Identifier (computer languages)
|
IEEE Computer Society
|
IEEE Design & Test of Computers
|
IEEE Koji Kobayashi Computers and Communications Award
|
IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems
|
IEEE Transactions on Computers
|
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
|
IMPACT (computer graphics)
|
Individual Computers Catweasel
|
Influence of the IBM PC on the personal computer market
|
INFOCOMP Journal of Computer Science
|
Information and computer science
|
Input (computer science)
|
Input enhancement (computer science)
|
In re Hayes Microcomputer Products, Inc. Patent Litig.
|
Installation (computer programs)
|
Instance (computer science)
|
Institute for Computer Science and Control
|
Institute of Computer Science
|
Institute of Cryptography, Telecommunications and Computer Science
|
Institute of Management and Computer Studies
|
Instrumentation (computer programming)
|
Integer (computer science)
|
Integrated Computer-Aided Manufacturing
|
Intelligent computer-assisted language learning
|
Interact Home Computer
|
Intercultural communicative competence in computer-supported collaborative learning
|
Intergalactic Computer Network
|
International Association for Mathematics and Computers in Simulation
|
International Camp on Communication and Computers
|
International Computer and Information Literacy Study
|
International Computer Archive of Modern and Medieval English
|
International Computer Music Conference
|
International Computer Security Association
|
International Computers Limited
|
International Conference on Computer-Aided Design
|
International Conference on Computer and Information Technology
|
International Conference on Computer Vision
|
International Conference on Interactive Computer Aided Learning
|
International Festival of Computer Arts
|
International Journal of Advanced Computer Technology
|
International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science
|
International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery
|
International Journal of Computer Mathematics
|
International Journal of Computer Processing of Languages
|
International Journal of Computer Vision
|
International Journal of Foundations of Computer Science
|
International Journal of Mathematics and Computer Science
|
International Symposium on Computer Architecture
|
International Symposium on Mathematical Foundations of Computer Science
|
Interton Video Computer 4000
|
IPAQ (desktop computer)
|
Iran Computer and Video Games Foundation
|
Ishfaq Ahmad (computer scientist)
|
Jackson and His Computerband
|
Jacques Cohen (computer scientist)
|
Jaguar (supercomputer)
|
James H. Anderson (computer scientist)
|
Janusz Brzozowski (computer scientist)
|
Japan Computer Access Network
|
Japanese language and computers
|
Jeff Dean (computer scientist)
|
Jerusalem (computer virus)
|
Jim Brown (computer scientist)
|
Jim Davies (computer scientist)
|
Jim Gray (computer scientist)
|
Jim Hall (computer programmer)
|
Jim Thomas (computer scientist)
|
Jim Warren (computer specialist)
|
Jim Whitehead (computer scientist)
|
Jin Li (computer scientist)
|
John Barnes (computer scientist)
|
John Fitch (computer scientist)
|
John Fitzgerald (computer scientist)
|
John Hughes (computer scientist)
|
John Iliffe (computer designer)
|
John Lilly (computer scientist)
|
John McCarthy (computer scientist)
|
John Platt (computer scientist)
|
John R. Rice (computer scientist)
|
John von Neumann Computer Society
|
Joint Computer Conference
|
Jon Bentley (computer scientist)
|
Journal of Circuits, Systems, and Computers
|
Journal of Computer and System Sciences
|
Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography
|
Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication
|
Journal of the Brazilian Computer Society
|
Journal of Universal Computer Science
|
Juan Benet (computer scientist)
|
Jurassic Park (computer video game)
|
Kabru (supercomputer)
|
Kama Sutra (computer worm)
|
K computer
|
Keith Clark (computer scientist)
|
Ken Kennedy (computer scientist)
|
Kevin Scott (computer scientist)
|
Khoury College of Computer Sciences
|
Korea Computer Center
|
Kraken (supercomputer)
|
Kudos (computer program)
|
Kudzu (computer daemon)
|
Kyle Brown (computer scientist)
|
Label (computer science)
|
Laboratory for Foundations of Computer Science
|
Language Acquisition Device (computer)
|
Language and Computers
|
Language Computer Corporation
|
Launch Vehicle Digital Computer
|
Leaf class (computer programming)
|
Leap (computer worm)
|
Lebedev Institute of Precision Mechanics and Computer Engineering
|
Lecture Notes in Computer Science
|
LEO (computer)
|
Level of detail (computer graphics)
|
Lilith (computer)
|
Lillian Lee (computer scientist)
|
Li Sheng (computer scientist)
|
Listing (computer)
|
List of 16-bit computer color palettes
|
List of 3D computer graphics software
|
List of 8-bit computer hardware graphics
|
List of British computers
|
List of computer algebra systems
|
List of computer-animated films
|
List of computer books
|
List of computer bus interfaces
|
List of computer criminals
|
List of computer hardware manufacturers
|
List of computer museums
|
List of computer occupations
|
List of computer science conferences
|
List of computer security certifications
|
List of computer simulation software
|
List of computers running CP/M
|
List of computer standards
|
List of computers with on-board BASIC
|
List of computer system emulators
|
List of computer system manufacturers
|
List of computer systems from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
|
List of computer term etymologies
|
List of computer worms
|
List of convertible tablet computer brands
|
List of early microcomputers
|
List of early third generation computers
|
List of Enix home computer games
|
List of Family Computer Disk System games
|
List of Family Computer games
|
List of fictional computers
|
List of films about computers
|
List of Fortune 500 computer software and information companies
|
List of home computers
|
List of important publications in computer science
|
List of important publications in theoretical computer science
|
List of Jewish American computer scientists
|
List of Linux-supported computer architectures
|
List of members of the National Academy of Sciences (computer and information sciences)
|
List of MT-32-compatible computer games
|
List of pioneers in computer science
|
List of presidents of the British Computer Society
|
List of Soviet computer systems
|
List of text-based computer games
|
List of transistorized computers
|
List of unsolved problems in computer science
|
List of vacuum tube computers
|
Lists of computers
|
Lists of microcomputers
|
Literal (computer programming)
|
Little Computer 3
|
Little Computer People
|
Little man computer
|
Living Computers: Museum + Labs
|
Local Computer Networks Conference
|
Locale (computer software)
|
Lock (computer science)
|
Logical Methods in Computer Science
|
Logic in computer science
|
Logjam (computer security)
|
Loki (computer)
|
LossDiVincenzo quantum computer
|
Love Thru the Computer
|
M4 (computer language)
|
Macaroons (computer science)
|
Macro (computer science)
|
Magma (computer algebra system)
|
Mainframe computer
|
MAI Systems Corp. v. Peak Computer, Inc.
|
Manchester computers
|
Manik Varma (computer scientist)
|
Manny Lehman (computer scientist)
|
Marconi Transistorised Automatic Computer (T.A.C.)
|
Mark 8 Fire Control Computer
|
Mark Dean (computer scientist)
|
Market share of personal computer vendors
|
Markus Kuhn (computer scientist)
|
Marshalling (computer science)
|
Martin Newell (computer scientist)
|
Mary Shaw (computer scientist)
|
Mathematics and Computer Education
|
Maxon Computer GmbH
|
Mechanical computer
|
Melissa (computer virus)
|
Mesa (computer graphics)
|
Message passing in computer clusters
|
Meta learning (computer science)
|
Metaphor Computer Systems
|
Method (computer programming)
|
Michael Butler (computer scientist)
|
Michael Heath (computer scientist)
|
Michael J. Carey (computer scientist)
|
Michael Reiter (computer scientist)
|
Michael Wooldridge (computer scientist)
|
Michelangelo (computer virus)
|
Microcomputer
|
Microcomputer Associates, Incorporated
|
Microcomputer Club Nederland
|
Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation
|
Microsoft Corp. v. Harmony Computers & Electronics, Inc.
|
Midrange computer
|
Military computers
|
Mindset (computer)
|
Minicomputer
|
Minisupercomputer
|
Minsk family of computers
|
Mira (supercomputer)
|
MIR (computer)
|
Misfortune Cookie (computers)
|
MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
|
Mobile computer-supported collaborative learning
|
Modality (humancomputer interaction)
|
Mong Kok Computer Centre
|
Motion Interpolation (computer graphics)
|
Motorola Single Board Computers
|
M series (computer)
|
Multithreading (computer architecture)
|
Mung (computer term)
|
Museum Computer Network
|
Name resolution (computer systems)
|
Nanocomputer
|
Nascom (computer kit)
|
Nathaniel Rochester (computer scientist)
|
National Archive of Computerized Data on Aging
|
National Centre for Computer Animation
|
National Computer Center for Higher Education (France)
|
National Computerization Agency
|
National Computer Rank Examination
|
National Supercomputer Center in Guangzhou
|
National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences
|
Naval Computer and Telecommunications Command
|
NDR-Klein-Computer
|
Netsky (computer worm)
|
NetworkComputer
|
Network Computer
|
Network Computer Reference Profile
|
Neumont College of Computer Science
|
Neurocomputer
|
New York Institute of Technology Computer Graphics Lab
|
NeXT Computer
|
Nick Jennings (computer scientist)
|
Nissan Motors v. Nissan Computer
|
Nixdorf Computer
|
NLS (computer system)
|
Node (computer science)
|
NonStop (server computers)
|
North Star Computers
|
Norwegian Research Center for Computers and Law
|
NovemailHistorLaser Computer
|
Nuclear magnetic resonance quantum computer
|
Object (computer science)
|
Oded Regev (computer scientist)
|
Odin Computer Graphics
|
Odra (computer)
|
Offset (computer science)
|
OK Computer
|
OK Computer OKNOTOK 1997 2017
|
Oldenburger Computer-Museum
|
One-instruction set computer
|
One-way quantum computer
|
Ontario (computer virus)
|
On the Cruelty of Really Teaching Computer Science
|
Open Computer Network
|
Operator (computer programming)
|
ORCA (computer system)
|
Organic computer
|
Osborne Computer Corporation
|
scar Pastor (computer scientist)
|
Outline of computer engineering
|
Outline of computer programming
|
Outline of computer science
|
Outline of computer vision
|
Outline of humancomputer interaction
|
Overwriting (computer science)
|
Pablo Rodriguez (computer scientist)
|
Page (computer memory)
|
Panel (computer software)
|
Paper computer
|
Parallel Computers, Inc.
|
Parameter (computer programming)
|
Paul Horn (computer scientist)
|
Paxos (computer science)
|
Peloton (supercomputer)
|
People's Computer Company
|
Periphere Computer Systeme
|
Perlmutter (supercomputer)
|
PERM (computer)
|
Persistence (computer science)
|
Personal computer
|
Personal Computer Magazine
|
Personal Computer Memory Card International Association
|
Personal Computer Museum
|
Pertec Computer
|
Peter Baumann (computer scientist)
|
Peter Gutmann (computer scientist)
|
Peter Lee (computer scientist)
|
Peter Smith (computer scientist)
|
Peter Vogel (computer designer)
|
Petit Computer
|
Philco computers
|
Phoebe (computer)
|
Phoenix (computer)
|
Pin (computer program)
|
Pixar Image Computer
|
Piz Daint (supercomputer)
|
PLATO (computer system)
|
Pleiades (supercomputer)
|
Plug computer
|
Pocket computer
|
Pocket-sized computer
|
Pointer (computer programming)
|
Police National Computer
|
Polling (computer science)
|
Poltergeist (computer programming)
|
Polygon (computer graphics)
|
Polymorphic Systems (computers)
|
Polymorphism (computer science)
|
Pool (computer science)
|
Popping (computer graphics)
|
Poppy.Computer
|
Poppy.Computer Tour
|
Portable computer
|
Portal:Companies/Index by industry/Sub/Computer
|
Portal (computer)
|
Portal:Computer programming
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/box-footer
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/box-header
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Categories
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Intro
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Nominate/Selected article
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Nominate/Selected picture
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/People
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Projects
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Related portals
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected article
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected article/1
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected article/2
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected article/3
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected article/5
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected biography/2
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected person
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected picture
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected picture/1
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected picture/2
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected picture/3
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Selected picture/5
|
Portal:Humancomputer interaction/Topics
|
Port (computer networking)
|
Pose (computer vision)
|
Power supply unit (computer)
|
Pravetz computers
|
Predication (computer architecture)
|
Prentice Hall International Series in Computer Science
|
Prime Computer
|
Princeton Application Repository for Shared-Memory Computers
|
Principal (computer security)
|
Privacy-enhanced computer display
|
Privatization (computer programming)
|
PRODIGAL (computer system)
|
Production (computer science)
|
Professional certification (computer technology)
|
Profiling (computer programming)
|
Proposed directive on the patentability of computer-implemented inventions
|
Protected computer
|
Public computer
|
Pumping (computer systems)
|
Quanta Computer
|
Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG Electronics, Inc.
|
Radiosity (computer graphics)
|
Range (computer programming)
|
Rank (computer programming)
|
Raymond Lister (computer science researcher)
|
Reading (computer)
|
Real-time computer graphics
|
Re Atlantic Computer Systems plc (No 1)
|
Record (computer science)
|
Recursion (computer science)
|
Reduce (computer algebra system)
|
Reduced instruction set computer
|
Reference (computer science)
|
Reflection (computer graphics)
|
Reification (computer science)
|
Reliability (computer networking)
|
Relief mapping (computer graphics)
|
Remote computer
|
Rendering (computer graphics)
|
Research Institute for Advanced Computer Science
|
Research Institute of Computer Science and Random Systems
|
Retro Computer Museum
|
Rice Institute Computer
|
Richard Bird (computer scientist)
|
Richard Turner (computer scientist)
|
Robert Everett (computer scientist)
|
Robert Palmer (computer businessman)
|
Robert Taylor (computer scientist)
|
Robert Watson (computer scientist)
|
Robustness (computer science)
|
Rugged computer
|
Rule of three (computer programming)
|
Rutgers Computer and Technology Law Journal
|
Ryan Williams (computer scientist)
|
Sabre (computer system)
|
SAGE Computer Technology
|
Samuel Madden (computer scientist)
|
Samy (computer worm)
|
Sandbox (computer security)
|
San Diego Supercomputer Center
|
Sasser (computer worm)
|
SCA (computer virus)
|
Scale factor (computer science)
|
SCC (Specialist Computer Centres)
|
Schedule (computer science)
|
Scope (computer science)
|
SEAC (computer)
|
Seattle Computer Products
|
Security and Privacy in Computer Systems
|
Self-management (computer science)
|
Semantics (computer science)
|
Sentient computer
|
Sequent Computer Systems
|
Sequoia (supercomputer)
|
Serial computer
|
Session (computer science)
|
Seymour Cray Computer Engineering Award
|
Shaheen (supercomputer)
|
Sharp pocket computer character sets
|
Short Code (computer language)
|
Side effect (computer science)
|
Sierra (supercomputer)
|
SIESTA (computer program)
|
SIGCSE Award for Lifetime Service to the Computer Science Education Community
|
SIGCSE Award for Outstanding Contribution to Computer Science Education
|
Sigil (computer programming)
|
Silicon Valley Computer Group Philippines
|
Silliman University College of Computer Studies
|
Simile (computer virus)
|
Simplified Instructional Computer
|
Single-board computer
|
Skcin computer tan hoax
|
Skeleton (computer programming)
|
Skipper (computer software)
|
Slowloris (computer security)
|
Smash (Jackson and His Computerband album)
|
SMIL (computer)
|
Snapshot (computer storage)
|
Snowball (single-board computer)
|
Social Science Computer Review
|
Solbourne Computer
|
Sol (computer)
|
Sony Computer Entertainment America, Inc. v. Hotz
|
Sony Computer Entertainment, Inc. v. Connectix Corp.
|
Sony Computer Entertainment Japan
|
Sord Computer Corporation
|
Soundboard (computer program)
|
South African Computer Olympiad
|
South Central Ohio Computer Association
|
SPARKLE Computer
|
Spencer Kimball (computer programmer)
|
Sprite (computer graphics)
|
Sprout (computer)
|
St Albans City and DC v International Computers Ltd
|
Stanford Center for Computers and the Law
|
Star Trek: 25th Anniversary (computer game)
|
Starvation (computer science)
|
Stephen Robertson (computer scientist)
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Stereogum Presents... OKX: A Tribute to OK Computer
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Steve Chen (computer engineer)
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Steve Cunningham (computer scientist)
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Steve Gibson (computer programmer)
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Steve Lawrence (computer scientist)
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Stevens v Kabushiki Kaisha Sony Computer Entertainment
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Steve Schneider (computer scientist)
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Steve Vickers (computer scientist)
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Stoned (computer virus)
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Stored-program computer
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Straftaten gegen die ffentliche Ordnung Gegen ein Verbot von Action-Computerspielen
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Stream (computer science)
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Strela computer
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String (computer science)
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Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs
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Sue Black (computer scientist)
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SUHA (computer science)
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Summit (supercomputer)
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Sunday (computer virus)
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Supercomputer
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Supercomputer Education Research Centre
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Supercomputer operating system
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SUPER (computer program)
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Super Harvard Architecture Single-Chip Computer
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Superminicomputer
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Supertek Computers
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Surface computer
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SWAC (computer)
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Swap (computer programming)
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Swedish Institute of Computer Science
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Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science
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Symposium on Logic in Computer Science
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Symposium on Theoretical Aspects of Computer Science
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Synchronization (computer science)
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System G (supercomputer)
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System X (supercomputer)
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Systime Computers
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Table computer
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Tablet computer
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Tadpole Computer
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Taiwania (supercomputer)
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Tandem Computers
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Tandy 10 Business Computer System
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Tandy Pocket Computer
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Tangerine Computer Systems
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Tanktics: Computer Game of Armored Combat on the Eastern Front
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Ten Commandments of Computer Ethics
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Tera Computer Company
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Ternary computer
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Tetrahedron Computer Methodology
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Texas Instruments Compact Computer 40
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Texas Instruments Professional Computer
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Texas Instruments Professional Computer and Professional Portable Computer
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The Art of Computer Game Design
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The Art of Computer Programming
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The Computer Connection
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The Computer Contradictionary
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The Computer Edition of Risk: The World Conquest Game
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The Computer Edition of Scrabble
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The Computer Journal
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The Computer Language Benchmarks Game
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The Computer Museum
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The Computer Museum, Boston
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The Computer Paper
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The Computer Programme
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The Computers
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The Computer Wore Menace Shoes
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The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes (1995 film)
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The Higher Institute of Computer Technology
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The Man Who Invented the Computer
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Theoretical computer science
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Theoretical Computer Science (journal)
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The Palace (computer program)
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The Public-Access Computer Systems Review
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The Punisher (1990 computer game)
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The Ultimate Computer
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This (computer programming)
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Thomas M. Siebel Center for Computer Science
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Thorn EMI Computer Software
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Thrashing (computer science)
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Threat (computer)
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TI Advanced Scientific Computer
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Tim Bell (computer scientist)
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Timeline of computer animation in film and television
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Timeline of computer viruses and worms
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Timex Computer 2048
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Tiny Computers
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Titan (supercomputer)
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Tom Lane (computer scientist)
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Tom Miller (computer programmer)
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Tom Porter (computer scientist)
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Topological quantum computer
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Toronto Computer Leasing Inquiry
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Torpedo Data Computer
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Trademark (computer security)
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Traffic flow (computer networking)
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Trait (computer programming)
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Transient (computer programming)
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Transistor computer
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Transition (computer science)
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Transparency (humancomputer interaction)
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Trapped ion quantum computer
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Trenton Computer Festival
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Trimming (computer programming)
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TRS-80 Color Computer
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Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria
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Tsubame (supercomputer)
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Tudor Vianu National College of Computer Science
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Tulip Computers
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TUM Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
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Turku Centre for Computer Science
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UBC Department of Computer Science
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UCPH Department of Computer Science
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Ultra-low-cost personal computer
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UMC (computer)
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Underwater computer vision
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Unification (computer science)
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Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act
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University of Central Florida College of Engineering and Computer Science
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University of Colorado Boulder Computer Science Department
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University of Computer Studies, Kalay
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University of Computer Studies (Pakokku)
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University of Computer Studies, Yangon
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University of Kyiv Faculty of Radio Physics, Electronics and Computer Systems
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University of Maryland College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences
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University of Maryland HumanComputer Interaction Lab
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University of Massachusetts Amherst College of Information and Computer Sciences
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University of Toronto Department of Computer Science
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UO Computer and Information Science Department
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UP Diliman Department of Computer Science
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User:Crazycomputers/VandalSniper
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Valerie Taylor (computer scientist)
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Value (computer science)
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Vanish (computer science)
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Variable (computer science)
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Verification and validation of computer simulation models
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Vertex (computer graphics)
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VideoBrain Family Computer
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VideoGames & Computer Entertainment
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Videoton TV-Computer
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Vietnamese language and computers
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Vintage Computer Festival
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Volatile (computer programming)
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Voyager (computer worm)
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VTech PreComputer 2000
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Walter Brenner (computer scientist)
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Wanganui Computer Centre bombing
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WANK (computer worm)
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Watson (computer)
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Watumull Institute of Electronics Engineering and Computer Technology
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WDMA (computer)
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WDR Computerclub
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WDR paper computer
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Wearable computer
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Webster's Microcomputer Buyer's Guide
|
Wei Wang (computer scientist)
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Wei Zhao (computer scientist)
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Westwood (computer virus)
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Wetware computer
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Whale (computer virus)
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White box (computer hardware)
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Whitechapel Computer Works
|
White hat (computer security)
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William Clinger (computer scientist)
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William Newman (computer scientist)
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Wishbone (computer bus)
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Witty (computer worm)
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Word (computer architecture)
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Word mark (computer hardware)
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Workgroup (computer networking)
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World Computer Exchange
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Yellowstone (supercomputer)
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Yerevan Computer Research and Development Institute
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YLMF Computer Technology Co., Ltd.
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Your Computer
|
Z1 (computer)
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Z22 (computer)
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Z25 (computer)
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Z2 (computer)
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Z3 (computer)
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Z4 (computer)
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Zhiming Liu (computer scientist)
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Zygmunt Vetulani (computer scientist)
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