Tech Quiz

Discussion in 'Computer Forum' started by ajitmat_24, Mar 8, 2007.

  1. thehundredthone

    thehundredthone Well-Known Member

    I'm confused, was that sarcastic sarcasm?

    Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society
    and NOT Complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor
     
  2. ajitmat_24

    ajitmat_24 New Member

    Ya guy being too oversmart. Forgot his is tech thread not silly MET dept.

    Now my anwser to the question-What's size of CMOS Death Virus?
    Ans.-512 bytes.

    As told by akkyy21 it is memory resident virus that attack the master boot record.

    And also CMOS stands for Complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor and NOT Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society or any other silly cat-dog name
     
  3. ajitmat_24

    ajitmat_24 New Member

    Now comon someone post some question. Only related to tech not PJs.
     
  4. ajitmat_24

    ajitmat_24 New Member

    No one is interested to post a question, so I am posting a question.

    My question-There is a virus named Joshi. If it has infected ur computer and uboot it in 5th day of any month, then what message will it show?
     
  5. shak

    shak Harrr!

    no that was a joke harry told me at the pub last night .. funny init?
     
  6. thehundredthone

    thehundredthone Well-Known Member

    Oh I'm so sorry sir.

    And who are you?

    @shak: You did realise it was humour right?
     
  7. shak

    shak Harrr!

    @ajimat: no idea .. i am a mac user so dont know what viruses mean :p

    ... right here is a twister ..


    what is the resolution of human eyes in megapixels? (ofcourse there is no exact answer .. but i know a very good estimate)
     
  8. ajitmat_24

    ajitmat_24 New Member


    Hope more than my digital camera. Guy NO IDEA.
     
  9. ajitmat_24

    ajitmat_24 New Member


    Well the answer is-"HAPPY BIRTHDAY JOSHI"
     
  10. ajitmat_24

    ajitmat_24 New Member

    Shak comon post the answer. Keen to know it
     
  11. shak

    shak Harrr!

    ^ sorry .. i was away for the last few days ..

    here is the answer .

    576 megapixels of available image data!

    "The average human retina has five million cone receptors on it. Since the cones are responsible for colour vision, you might suppose that this equates to a five megapixel equivilant for the human eye.

    But there are also a hundred million rods that detect monochrome contrast, which plays an important role in the sharpness of the image you see. And even this 105MP is an underestimate because the eye is not a still camera.

    You have two eyes (no kidding!) and they continually flick around to cover a much larger area than your field of view and the composite image is assembled in the brain - not unlike stitching together a panoramic photo. In good light, you can distinguish two fine lines if they are seperate by at least 0.6 arc-minutes (0.01.Degrees).

    This gives an equivilant pixel size of 0.3 arc-minutes. If you take a conservative 120 degrees as your horizontal field of view and 60 degrees in the vertical plane, this translates to ...

    576 megapixels of available image data."
     
  12. thehundredthone

    thehundredthone Well-Known Member

    ^ but no zoom. :boxed:
     
  13. zicky5608

    zicky5608 Power Shortage

    ^
    Lol.

    (10 char)

    Lol.

    (20 char :grin:)
     
  14. ajitmat_24

    ajitmat_24 New Member

    Quite informative Shak
     
  15. shak

    shak Harrr!

    ^ i should make this clear that i have copied this information from elsewhere and i really can't take any credit for that ... but yes ...quite informative
     
  16. akkyy21

    akkyy21 #%@!$&

    N i thought it was a tech quiz thread.
     
  17. shak

    shak Harrr!

    you can't take anything for granted on IGT anymore ....

    ok another question, how many spices in KFC's secret chicken recipe?
     
  18. thehundredthone

    thehundredthone Well-Known Member

    ^ None. It's so freaking bland!
     
  19. i think 11? or 9.. im not sure.
     
  20. zing

    zing Machine Head

    which famous inventor planted a bug in his invention that allowed him to login to any system?
     

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