computer terminal, a device that enables a
computer to receive or deliver data. Computer terminals vary greatly depending on the format of the data they handle. For example, a simple early terminal comprised a typewriter keyboard for input and a typewriter printing element for
alphanumeric output. A more recent variation includes the keyboard for input and a televisionlike screen to display the output. The screen can be a
cathode-ray tube or a gas plasma panel, the latter involving an ionized gas (sandwiched between glass layers) that glows to form dots which, in turn, connect to form lines. Such displays can present a variety of output, ranging from simple alphanumerics to complex graphic images used as design tools by architects and engineers. Portable terminals frequently use
liquid crystal displays because of their low power requirements. The terminals of
pen-based computers use a stylus to input handwriting on the screen. Touch-sensitive terminals accept input made by touching a pressure-sensitive panel in front of a menu displayed on the screen. Other familiar types of terminals include store checkout systems that deliver detailed printed receipts and use
laser scanners to read the
bar codes on packages, and automatic teller machines in banks.
See L. Tijerina, Video Display Terminal Workstation Ergonomics (1984).
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