math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_many_computers_are_there_worldwide

Preview meta tags from the math.answers.com website.

Linked Hostnames

8

Thumbnail

Search Engine Appearance

Google

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_many_computers_are_there_worldwide

How many computers are there worldwide? - Answers

There is no definite answer, and there is no way anyone can get a practical answer to this question either. Computers are constantly manufactured, and constantly taken out of service.There are some guesses that show there could be a billion, and that the count could double to two billion in a few more years. At least for general purpose PCs. (See Related Links)The second related link, in case you want to watch the OS wars or various other subsets of the numbers for what kinds of computers hit the internet, then this also may help, understanding that every percentage point is probably nearly ten million computers NOW (as of 4/2008), and the value of every percentage point keeps going up every day.Part of the problem is where you draw the line. If any computational device, including those microcontrollers embedded into things like cellular phones, MP3 players, TV sets, stereos, etc. count, then there are already billions upon billions of computers. In larger systems like a car, the engine is run by a computer, the stereo has a computer in it, the dashboard might contain another computer to operate digital gauges, a DVD player for the back seats has a computer, and a GPS navigation device has a computer. Not to mention any security system like 'OnStar' that communicates over the cellular network and manages the door locks and talks to the engine computer, among other things. Most peripherals connected to a computer also contain embedded computers. A printer or scanner has its own microprocessor. So does your wireless router and MODEM. Even your keyboard and mouse have simple microcontrollers.Another part of the problem is the people who collect this data tend to be a little tight-fisted with it. They want to sell the information, and in the contract of sale, they forbid the buyer from releasing it. Both of the links in this article go to sites that collect the data, but only give away a subset of it for public consumption.



Bing

How many computers are there worldwide? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_many_computers_are_there_worldwide

There is no definite answer, and there is no way anyone can get a practical answer to this question either. Computers are constantly manufactured, and constantly taken out of service.There are some guesses that show there could be a billion, and that the count could double to two billion in a few more years. At least for general purpose PCs. (See Related Links)The second related link, in case you want to watch the OS wars or various other subsets of the numbers for what kinds of computers hit the internet, then this also may help, understanding that every percentage point is probably nearly ten million computers NOW (as of 4/2008), and the value of every percentage point keeps going up every day.Part of the problem is where you draw the line. If any computational device, including those microcontrollers embedded into things like cellular phones, MP3 players, TV sets, stereos, etc. count, then there are already billions upon billions of computers. In larger systems like a car, the engine is run by a computer, the stereo has a computer in it, the dashboard might contain another computer to operate digital gauges, a DVD player for the back seats has a computer, and a GPS navigation device has a computer. Not to mention any security system like 'OnStar' that communicates over the cellular network and manages the door locks and talks to the engine computer, among other things. Most peripherals connected to a computer also contain embedded computers. A printer or scanner has its own microprocessor. So does your wireless router and MODEM. Even your keyboard and mouse have simple microcontrollers.Another part of the problem is the people who collect this data tend to be a little tight-fisted with it. They want to sell the information, and in the contract of sale, they forbid the buyer from releasing it. Both of the links in this article go to sites that collect the data, but only give away a subset of it for public consumption.



DuckDuckGo

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_many_computers_are_there_worldwide

How many computers are there worldwide? - Answers

There is no definite answer, and there is no way anyone can get a practical answer to this question either. Computers are constantly manufactured, and constantly taken out of service.There are some guesses that show there could be a billion, and that the count could double to two billion in a few more years. At least for general purpose PCs. (See Related Links)The second related link, in case you want to watch the OS wars or various other subsets of the numbers for what kinds of computers hit the internet, then this also may help, understanding that every percentage point is probably nearly ten million computers NOW (as of 4/2008), and the value of every percentage point keeps going up every day.Part of the problem is where you draw the line. If any computational device, including those microcontrollers embedded into things like cellular phones, MP3 players, TV sets, stereos, etc. count, then there are already billions upon billions of computers. In larger systems like a car, the engine is run by a computer, the stereo has a computer in it, the dashboard might contain another computer to operate digital gauges, a DVD player for the back seats has a computer, and a GPS navigation device has a computer. Not to mention any security system like 'OnStar' that communicates over the cellular network and manages the door locks and talks to the engine computer, among other things. Most peripherals connected to a computer also contain embedded computers. A printer or scanner has its own microprocessor. So does your wireless router and MODEM. Even your keyboard and mouse have simple microcontrollers.Another part of the problem is the people who collect this data tend to be a little tight-fisted with it. They want to sell the information, and in the contract of sale, they forbid the buyer from releasing it. Both of the links in this article go to sites that collect the data, but only give away a subset of it for public consumption.

  • General Meta Tags

    22
    • title
      How many computers are there worldwide? - Answers
    • charset
      utf-8
    • Content-Type
      text/html; charset=utf-8
    • viewport
      minimum-scale=1, initial-scale=1, width=device-width, shrink-to-fit=no
    • X-UA-Compatible
      IE=edge,chrome=1
  • Open Graph Meta Tags

    7
    • og:image
      https://st.answers.com/html_test_assets/Answers_Blue.jpeg
    • og:image:width
      900
    • og:image:height
      900
    • og:site_name
      Answers
    • og:description
      There is no definite answer, and there is no way anyone can get a practical answer to this question either. Computers are constantly manufactured, and constantly taken out of service.There are some guesses that show there could be a billion, and that the count could double to two billion in a few more years. At least for general purpose PCs. (See Related Links)The second related link, in case you want to watch the OS wars or various other subsets of the numbers for what kinds of computers hit the internet, then this also may help, understanding that every percentage point is probably nearly ten million computers NOW (as of 4/2008), and the value of every percentage point keeps going up every day.Part of the problem is where you draw the line. If any computational device, including those microcontrollers embedded into things like cellular phones, MP3 players, TV sets, stereos, etc. count, then there are already billions upon billions of computers. In larger systems like a car, the engine is run by a computer, the stereo has a computer in it, the dashboard might contain another computer to operate digital gauges, a DVD player for the back seats has a computer, and a GPS navigation device has a computer. Not to mention any security system like 'OnStar' that communicates over the cellular network and manages the door locks and talks to the engine computer, among other things. Most peripherals connected to a computer also contain embedded computers. A printer or scanner has its own microprocessor. So does your wireless router and MODEM. Even your keyboard and mouse have simple microcontrollers.Another part of the problem is the people who collect this data tend to be a little tight-fisted with it. They want to sell the information, and in the contract of sale, they forbid the buyer from releasing it. Both of the links in this article go to sites that collect the data, but only give away a subset of it for public consumption.
  • Twitter Meta Tags

    1
    • twitter:card
      summary_large_image
  • Link Tags

    16
    • alternate
      https://www.answers.com/feed.rss
    • apple-touch-icon
      /icons/180x180.png
    • canonical
      https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_many_computers_are_there_worldwide
    • icon
      /favicon.svg
    • icon
      /icons/16x16.png

Links

59