Hardware vs Liveware - What's the difference?
hardware | liveware |
Fixtures]], equipment, tools and [[device, devices used for general-purpose construction and repair of a structure or object. Also such equipment as sold as stock by a store of the same name, e.g. hardware store.
(informal) Equipment.
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(computing) The part of a computer that is fixed and cannot be altered without replacement or physical modification; motherboard, expansion cards, etc. Compare software.
* 1952 , "Binary Arithmetic", R.L. Michaelson, in The Incorporated Statistician , vol. 3, no. 1 (Feb. 1952), pp 35-40.
(technology) Electronic equipment.
Metal implements.
(slang) A firearm.
(colloquial) People who work with computers, as opposed to the software or hardware they use; loosely , human beings, as opposed to technology.
As nouns the difference between hardware and liveware
is that hardware is hardware while liveware is (colloquial) people who work with computers, as opposed to the software or hardware they use; loosely , human beings, as opposed to technology.hardware
English
Noun
(-)- He needed a hammer, nails, screws, nuts, bolts and other assorted hardware , so he went to the hardware store.
- military hardware
- Hardware is the generally accepted colloquism for anything inside a computer other than an engineer.
