Re: Hardware
- From: "Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 26 May 2008 15:20:06 -0400
How do you define doing homework?
It's doing research. First you ask the question, get an answer, then verify its correctness. Whether or not someone does there howework by asking the question directly or research the newsgroup archives on google, they are still getting the information from here. It's not the answer so much that is learned but the process of completing the research. The actual answers are not always as important as the process.
Besides, OP will still need to verify the answer's correctness, requiring additional research, as any question here can illicit all sorts of responses. So, simply asking a question in a highly opinionated, peer to peer group may actually require more work on the asker's part if they are hoping to get a good grade as the person responding may know even less than the person asking the question.
Or I could just be full of sh**....<g>
--
Best of Luck,
Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
"Gordon" <gbplinux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:D8C70227-AE4B-4DB7-B0DE-6B3F5020FE3C@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"Rick Rogers" <rick@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:O2MsvfzvIHA.3760@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxHi,
Generally, it's any piece of hardware connected to a system, either wired or wireless, that is not part of the main drive tower. Examples are the keyboard, mouse, printer, USB attachments, etc.
The OP is doing homework - let him find his own answers!
.
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