ubiquitous$86076$ - translation to spanish
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

ubiquitous$86076$ - translation to spanish

JAPANESE COMPUTER SCIENTIST
Ubiquitous Communicator; Ubiquitous communicator; Sakamura; 坂村健

ubiquitous      
adj. ubicuo, omnipresente
ever-present         
THE PROPERTY OF BEING PRESENT EVERYWHERE
Omnipresent; Ubiquitous; Ubiquitously; Ubiquitos; Ubiquity (ability); Ubiquitousness; Everpresent; Ever-present; Ever present; Everpresence; Ever-presence; Ever presence; Ever presences; Ever-presences; Everpresences; Everpresently; Ever-presently; Ever presently
(adj.) = omnipresente
Ex: Maurice Freedman's concluding remarks at the "Institute on The Catalog: Its Nature and Prospects" proved that the interest in cataloging and catalogs is an ever-present reality.
omnipresent         
THE PROPERTY OF BEING PRESENT EVERYWHERE
Omnipresent; Ubiquitous; Ubiquitously; Ubiquitos; Ubiquity (ability); Ubiquitousness; Everpresent; Ever-present; Ever present; Everpresence; Ever-presence; Ever presence; Ever presences; Ever-presences; Everpresences; Everpresently; Ever-presently; Ever presently
(adj.) = omnipresente
Ex: Censorship is an omnipresent reality in the public school system in Canada.

Definition

ubiquitous computing
Computers everywhere. Making many computers available throughout the physical environment, while making them effectively invisible to the user. Ubiquitous computing is held by some to be the Third Wave of computing. The First Wave was many people per computer, the Second Wave was one person per computer. The Third Wave will be many computers per person. Three key technical issues are: power consumption, user interface, and wireless connectivity. The idea of ubiquitous computing as invisible computation was first articulated by Mark Weiser in 1988 at the Computer Science Lab at Xerox PARC. http://ubiq.com/hypertext/weiser/weiser.html. (1994-12-23)

Wikipedia

Ken Sakamura

Ken Sakamura (坂村 健, Sakamura Ken, born 25 July 1951 in Tokyo, Japan), as of April 2017, is a Japanese professor and dean of the Faculty of Information Networking for Innovation and Design at Toyo University, Japan. He is a former professor in information science at the University of Tokyo (through March 2017). He is the creator of the real-time operating system (RTOS) architecture TRON.

In 2001, he shared the Takeda Award for Social/Economic Well-Being with Richard Stallman and Linus Torvalds.