Jay is a programmer based in Seoul, sharing his experience from IT companies and education to make technology easy for beginners. He emphasizes that understanding AI starts with building a solid IT foundation and aims to guide readers step by step. The blog covers topics such as IT basics, how computers work, beginner coding, software tips, terminology, and computer history. Jay values two-way communication, encouraging readers to leave comments, ask questions, and suggest future topics. His goal is to post short, frequent, and practical lessons that help readers gradually gain IT confidence in the age of AI. You can view the original blog post in Korean and English at the links below: [ View in Korean ] | [ View in English ]
AI Festa 2025 will be held from September 30 to October 2, 2025, at COEX Hall A in Seoul, hosted by the Ministry of Science and ICT. It’s Korea’s largest AI exhibition and conference, showcasing the present and future of AI with 150+ companies participating. The event includes global conferences, forums, workshops, and an AI town hall meeting with the Minister. Registration is free via the official website (aifesta.kr), and visitors can explore booths, demos, and industry trends. This is an excellent opportunity to experience real-world AI applications and understand how AI transforms innovation and industry. You can view the original blog post in Korean and English at the links below: [ View in Korean ] | [ View in English ]
Most computers follow the Von Neumann architecture: programs and data share memory; the CPU fetches and executes instructions sequentially. CPU is the brain for arithmetic/logic/control—often with NPUs—while the motherboard is the nervous system linking all parts via buses. RAM is fast, volatile short-term memory for active tasks; storage (SSD/HDD/NVMe) is long-term, persistent data. PSU supplies stable DC power; GPU accelerates graphics/video and many AI workloads; I/O devices let you interact; the case cools and protects. Together they form one system—same principles power phones like the iPhone, just in a tighter, integrated form. Photo by Bruno on Pexels Photo by Matveev on Pexels Photo by Athena Sandrini on Pexels Photo by William Warby on Pexels Photo by Andrey Matveev on Pexels Photo by Sergei Starostin on Pexels You can view the original blog post in Korean and English at the links below: [ View in Korean ] | [ View in English ]
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