funfact.wiki
AboutGuidelinesTermsPrivacyContact

Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Computer | funfact.wiki | funfact.wiki

Computer

SETI@home used volunteers' idle computers to scan space for extraterrestrial signals. Aimed at 50,000–100,000 machines, it drew 5.2 million participants and logged over 2 million years of computing—about 50x faster than the world's top supercomputer in 2013.
  • Alien
  • Computer
  • Space
0
When an acronym expands to include itself — like GNU (GNU is Not Unix), PHP (PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor), and YAML (YAML Ain't Markup Language) — it's called a recursive acronym. PHP was originally Personal Home Page Tools before being redefined.
  • GNU
  • PHP
  • YAML
  • Recursive acronym
  • Computer
  • Language
0
Tim Berners-Lee, the father of the Internet, apologized for adding "//" to "http://". He said "http:" alone would have sufficed, but he added the slashes because "it looked cool at the time."
  • Internet
  • Computer
  • Tim Berners-Lee
0
Bill Burr, who wrote the 2003 NIST guidelines recommending passwords mix uppercase, numbers, and special characters, later said he regretted it — his reference material was from the 1980s. Experts now say long passphrases of multiple words are both safer and easier to remember.
  • Password
  • Computer
  • Security
0
The standard test image in computer image processing comes from a 1972 Playboy magazine. A researcher cropped Lena Forsen's photo for a paper, and it became the field's benchmark, earning her the nickname "First lady of the internet."
  • Computer
  • Image processing
  • Playboy
0
Test Computer content with wiki links.
  • Computer
0

Add New Card

0/300
Computer