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The phrase "a battery of computers" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a group or collection of computers that are used together for a specific purpose, often in a technical or scientific context.
Example: "The researchers utilized a battery of computers to process the large dataset efficiently."
Alternatives: "a cluster of computers" or "a suite of computers".
Exact(10)
A battery of computers and associated technophile kit surrounds his desk.
But where Gehry employed titanium alloy and a battery of computers, things were done differently at Niterói.
But where Gehry employed titanium alloy and a battery of computers, things were done differently at Niterói.
Illustrated by a battery of computers, his talk ballooned from a scheduled two-hour session to five hours at the insistence of mesmerized board members.
The Met has had to reinforce the stage with steel supports because of the enormous machine that will manage Lepage's set changes via a battery of computers.
A snarl of sensors and wires is attached to nearly every part of the humming engine, feeding reams of data to a battery of computers and watchful engineers in the adjacent control room.
Similar(50)
It would be insulting to dismiss their style as simplistic – I know for a fact that you don't play so vibrantly without a great deal of thought – but it's true to say that the Japanese did away with many of the complications imposed on the modern game by coaches armed with a battery of computer programmes spewing out torrents of data.
For the finals, which took place in 12 events divided by weight and age groups, eight machines were lined up before a knowledgeable audience of 500 loud spectators and a battery of computer monitors that explained who was ahead and by how much.
In fact, the only really disconcerting thing about the whole experiment are the wires trailing from the metal cranial implant (it looks a bit like a small tin can surgically attached to her head) to a battery of computer processors on a rack in the corner of the room.
"We build most of our own programs because there is nothing on the market," says Wild. "There is no such thing as 'Roller Coaster Office.' Maybe Microsoft and Bill Gates havent thought of that yet". As for safety checks, designers run a battery of computer simulations on new coasters, while park maintenance crews scour daily for fractures or sticky control systems.
Along with a battery of supporting computers it's used by government agencies and private companies to simulate what could happen if hackers tried to take control of a town's digital infrastructure.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com