Question:
What is the embedded devices definition?
2007-10-11 06:55:00 UTC
What embedded devices does? Where to use embedded devices? Who can use embedded devices? Where to buy embedded devices?
Five answers:
sim
2007-10-11 07:15:17 UTC
Embedded devices are appliances or devices that use an embedded system to work..

An embedded system is hardware and software that forms a component of some larger system and is expected to function without human intervention. Embedded systems can respond to events in real time. Most digital appliances, such as watches or cars, utilize an embedded system.
?
2016-11-07 15:14:56 UTC
What Is An Embedded Device
?
2016-04-09 12:20:53 UTC
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An embedded system is a cheap computer built into a device. An example would be like a mall kiosk where they have a PC set up to give information about the mall. It could very well be running a special embedded version of Linux or Windows, which basically just means stripped down for performance and simplicity, since it is likely running on very modest hardware. Another example of an embedded computer would be a microcontroller built into an appliance. These days many of these have tiny embedded computers, and a re thus programmabvle, instead of being hard-wired to their functions. This answer is incomplete, but I think it isi what you were looking for.
2015-08-16 21:37:08 UTC
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RE:

What is the embedded devices definition?

What embedded devices does? Where to use embedded devices? Who can use embedded devices? Where to buy embedded devices?
?
2016-03-19 02:54:46 UTC
Well, for the two people who just cut and pasted from Wikipedia, pffft. Generative Grammar was developed by Noam Chomsky. The essence is that people do not build surface sentences as is. If two sentences are nearly identical in meaning, they both derive from a single "deep structure". This deep structure is generated by phrase structure rules that take the grammatical elements and lexical items and string them together in particular ways. There is then a second set of rules called the transformational rules that then manipulate the deep structure in particular ways to derive one or more different surface sentences from the one deep structure. For example, a simplified deep structure might be "John-SBJ PAST-kiss Marta-OBJ". The transformational rules can then yield a variety of surface forms depending on context and other factors, but which all basically mean the same thing: "John kissed Marta" "Marta was kissed" "Marta was kissed by John" "Marta is who John kissed" "It is Marta that John kissed", etc. Together, the two components of the grammar are called Transformational Grammar, Transformational-Generative Grammar, Generative-Transformational Grammar, or Generative Grammar.


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