If you input incorrect, ambiguous, or nonsensical data, the computer will process it perfectly and return nonsensical results. Unlike a human, a computer cannot look at a request and say, "That doesn't make logical sense."
Example: If you ask a human to "divide 5 by 0," they know it’s impossible. A computer will try to comply, usually causing an error or crashing because it lacks the contextual intelligence to reject the premise.
Computers cannot function independently. They rely entirely on: 5 limitations of computer
The most critical limitation of a computer is its complete lack of common sense and genuine intelligence. A computer cannot think, feel, or reason on its own. It operates strictly on the GIGO principle: Garbage In, Garbage Out.
Computers lack feelings, empathy, and moral reasoning. They cannot distinguish right from wrong or understand human values like fairness or compassion. If you input incorrect, ambiguous, or nonsensical data,
Computers cannot act independently. They require humans to provide data, write software, fix hardware, and make decisions.
This ties back to the "Zero IQ" point but focuses on utility. A human can learn a new skill by watching someone else do it once. A computer requires explicit coding to learn a new task. Computers cannot function independently
If you buy a brand-new, high-end laptop, it cannot do a single thing until you install an operating system and software. It cannot "figure out" how to be useful on its own.
The Limit: Computers are bound by the limitations of their software. If the programmer didn't think of a specific scenario, the computer will fail to handle it. They have no adaptability outside of their coded parameters. This is why software updates are constant—programmers are perpetually patching holes that the computer couldn't identify or fix itself.
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