Essential Information & explanations, latest texts & monographs on
Input.
The Indispensable PC Hardware Book (4th Edition) by Hans-Peter Messmer
PC Toys: 14 Cool Projects for Home, Office, and Entertainment by Barry Press
Java NIO by Ron Hitchens
Embedded Controller Hardware Design (With CD-ROM) by Ken Arnold
Mac Toys : 12 Cool Projects for Home, Office, and Entertainment by John Rizzo
USB Design by Example: A Practical Guide to Building I/O Devices by John Hyde
Parallel I/O for High Performance Computing by John May
The AnandTech Guide to PC Gaming Hardware by Anand Lal Shimpi
Digital Interfacing With an Analog World by McGraw-Hill/TAB Electronics
Input in Second Language Acquisition by Susan Gass
Human-Computer Interface Design Guidelines (Human/Computer Interaction, No 5) by C. Marlin Brown
InfiniBand Network Architecture by Inc. MindShare
From Input to Output: A Teacher's Guide to Second Language Acquisition by Bill VanPatten
Shaping Web Usability: Interaction Design in Context by Albert N. Badre
Control Systems With Input and Output Restraints: Design and Analysis of "Antiwindup" and "Overrides (Advance by W. Schaufelberger
Input
Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide")
1 Information processsing
2 Telecommunications
3 Control theory
4 See also:
Information processsing
In information processing, input is the process of receiving information from an object.
The word input is used as a noun (information received or the process of receiving it) and less often as a verb (to receive information; or to enter information that a program then uses as input).
Computers commonly use keyboards and mice to receive input from users. Other input comes from networks and storage devices such as disk drives.
Telecommunications
In telecommunication, the term input has the following meanings:
In a device, process, or channel, a point that accepts data.
A state, or a sequence of states, of a point that accepts data.
A stimulus, such as a signal or interference, that enters a functional unit, such as a telecommunications system, a computer, or a computer program.
Source: from Federal Standard 1037C
Control theory
In control theory, the inputs of a system are the signals that can be observed or affected that feed into the system. Specifically, inputs are differentiated from states
See also:
The above article is adapted from from Wikipedia All Wikipedia article text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
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