The correct answer: Yes, mobile-style apps can run in a personal computer's desktop.
That is possible by means of a desktop application called emulatator. An emulator like Bluestacks allows a personal computer to run mobile-style apps by acting as a virtual drive in the personal computer's harddisk.
Emulation is successful if the system requirements of the mobile-application is met by the personal computer's system attributes such as Random Access Memory abundance, Random Access Memory speed, Processing speed (in some cases core abundance e.g. core 2) etc.
Some mobile-applications do not work in the personal computer's desktop, however, if this application requires platform specific functions such as mobile device's network provider etc.
Data is the fundamental reason AI succeeds or fails.
This statement is true regarding Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Answer:
antivirus.......hope this answers your question
The distinction between "computer architecture" and "computer organization" has become very fuzzy, if no completely confused or unusable. Computer architecture was essentially a contract with software stating unambiguously what the hardware does. The architecture was essentially a set of statements of the form "If you execute this instruction (or get an interrupt, etc.), then that is what happens. Computer organization, then, was a usually high-level description of the logic, memory, etc, used to implement that contract: These registers, those data paths, this connection to memory, etc.
Programs written to run on a particular computer architecture should always run correctly on that architecture no matter what computer organization (implementation) is used.
For example, both Intel and AMD processors have the same X86 architecture, but how the two companies implement that architecture (their computer organizations) is usually very different. The same programs run correctly on both, because the architecture is the same, but they may run at different speeds, because the organizations are different. Likewise, the many companies implementing MIPS, or ARM, or other processors are providing the same architecture - the same programs run correctly on all of them - but have very different high - level organizations inside them.