Exact(9)
Some people think the computer is so quick, for example.
In this book, Norman shows why the computer is so difficult to use and why this complexity is fundamental to its nature.
"I'd like to continue working on it because this stuff to me, the connection between human and computer, is so fascinating," Greenstein said.
A quantum computer is so new, and so strange, that even the world's top quantum physicists and computer engineers do not know what a commercial one will ultimately look like.
Thus we can imagine that a given computer is so designed that it systematically makes (what we regard as) a formal mistake M. In this case, the machine would be unable to detect the mistake M, 'for M would constitute one of the laws by which the automaton detects errors' (Nunn 1978, 347).
He went on to explain to the packed room at Crypto 2017, a four-day conference sponsored by the International Association for Cryptographic Research, that the main reason building a quantum computer is so tough is because qubits (quantum bits), the counterpart of bits in classical computers, are unstable.
Similar(51)
It was made of DNA.The computer was so small that a trillion could exist, and compute in parallel, inside a small drop of water.
My computer was so excited by the whole thing it crashed two seconds after the ball crossed the line.
At first, the computer was so big and expensive that only national governments had the resources to build and operate one.
And then when Apple went public in 1980, Morgan Stanley had no clue what a personal computer was, so I became part of the team that took Apple public.
Donald A. Norman's provocative new book, The Invisible Computer: Why Good Products Can Fail, the Personal Computer Is So Complex, and Information Appliances Are the Solution MIT Presss, $25) insists that computers are so maddening because they're designed to serve technology instead of people.
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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