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ANALOG vs. DIGITAL
Electrical engineers use analog and digital data to work everyday.
Although, most people don't know it, we do too. Everyday you use a form
of analog data. Examples of everyday analog data include any time you have
taken an exact measurement. Digital data, however, is most commonly used
with computers. In the real world, it is used to measure something with
designated increments.
A few sample analog and digital objects:
Analog
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Digital
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Analog Clock
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Digital Clock
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Phonograph
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Computers
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To illustrate the difference in analog and digital data, a
person travelling down a slide will be used. This person's position on
the slide in analog data would be the distance from the top of the slide.
In terms of digital data, the person would be rated against a series of
steps (every step goes down the same designated increment). A visual representation
of this is shown on the two graphs below.
Analog
Here is an analog graph of the data that we have just discussed.
Digital
Here is a digital graph of the data.
In observing these graphs, it should be realized that the increment
the digital graph goes by is steps. However, the analog graph is continuous
and is on the range of all real numbers.
We have learned that computers operate using digital data. This data
is grouped into small units called bits. These bits are combined in complex
ways to simulate analog events. This simulation is what allows the complex
operations that computers are capable of today, which in its very essence
is the goal of computer science.
Now that you have become a master of the digital and analog aspects
of data, it is necessary that you continue your education in the grouping
of data, commonly known as BIT. Don't forget this knowledge is a "MUST
KNOW", because without it how will you ever be able to talk about data.
Continue your wonderful learning experience with BIT.

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All material and images on these pages are copyright Joseph,Ed. This page was developed for the Thinkquest1999
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