UltrawidePlanet.com
Free Newsletter HTML  Text
 
Technology Products Resources FAQ Home Webopedia Glossary     



internet.commerce
Be a Commerce Partner














Wireless Channel
802.11 Planet
802.11 Hotspots
allNetDevices
PocketPCWire
M-CommerceTimes
Palm Boulevard
PDAStreet
Psion Place
RIM Road
ThinkMobile
Visor Village
PocketPCcity
WirelessAdWatch
Events
Research

internet.com
IT
Developer
Internet News
Small Business
Personal Technology

Search internet.com
Advertise
Corporate Info
Newsletters
Tech Jobs
E-mail Offers


digital
Last modified: Tuesday, May 25, 2004 

(adj.) Describes any system based on discontinuous data or events. Computers are digital machines because at their most basic level they can distinguish between just two values, 0 and 1, or off and on. There is no simple way to represent all the values in between, such as 0.25. All data that a computer processes must be encoded digitally, as a series of zeroes and ones.

The opposite of digital is analog. A typical analog device is a clock in which the hands move continuously around the face. Such a clock is capable of indicating every possible time of day. In contrast, a digital clock is capable of representing only a finite number of times (every tenth of a second, for example).

In general, humans experience the world analogically. Vision, for example, is an analog experience because we perceive infinitely smooth gradations of shapes and colors. Most analog events, however, can be simulated digitally. Photographs in newspapers, for instance, consist of an array of dots that are either black or white. From afar, the viewer does not see the dots (the digital form), but only lines and shading, which appear to be continuous. Although digital representations are approximations of analog events, they are useful because they are relatively easy to store and manipulate electronically. The trick is in converting from analog to digital, and back again.

This is the principle behind compact discs (CDs). The music itself exists in an analog form, as waves in the air, but these sounds are then translated into a digital form that is encoded onto the disk. When you play a compact disc, the CD player reads the digital data, translates it back into its original analog form, and sends it to the amplifier and eventually the speakers.

Internally, computers are digital because they consist of discrete units called bits that are either on or off. But by combining many bits in complex ways, computers simulate analog events. In one sense, this is what computer science is all about.

Also see quantum computing.

  Related Links

Digital compression techniques - article
Describes the future of digital compression, techniques and picture quality.

Roots of the Processor: Digital Logic and the Semiconductor
Describes the fundamentals of how digital logic and circuits work. This page is from "The PC Guide".

Related Categories

Computer Science

Data

Related Terms

analog

bug

digital audio

digital-to-analog converter

digitize

modem

Nyquist's Law

transducer

Shopping
digital Products
Compare Products,Prices and Stores

Shop by Category:
Digital Cameras
1439 Model Matches

Camcorders
888 Store Offers

Hard Drives
3138 Store Offers

Memory Cards
18898 Model Matches

Watches
4308 Store Offers





internet.commediabistro.comJusttechjobs.comGraphics.com

Search:

WebMediaBrands Corporate Info

Legal Notices, Licensing, Permissions, Privacy Policy.
Advertise | Newsletters | Shopping | E-mail Offers | Freelance Jobs