Konrad Zuse was the inventor of the first fully functional, programmable computer in 1941.
ENIAC. No it was not the ENIAC. The first fully functional, fully programmable computer was the Z3. It was invented by a German Konrad Zuse before the ENIAC existed. Americans did not invent the computer.
CPU input units output units and primary memory
The system unit is the part of the computer that holds the motherboard, power supply and storage. The different types of system units are desktop, tower, mini-tower and notebook.
Some of the early peripherals included card punching and sorting machines, microfilm output units, plotter controls, tabulators, tape cleaners, and tape print units.
They are genes.
Alveoli
Data movement, apparatus control, and data processing are the three main functional views of the computer. Also, mechanism data is another functional view of the computer.
Nephron units are located in the kidney cortex. They are the functional units responsible for filtering blood and regulating the electrolyte balance and fluid volume in the body. Each kidney contains thousands of nephron units.
Genes are the functional units of heredity.
One of the functional units of a myofibril is the sarcomere. The word sarcomere comes from the Greek words sarx, meaning flesh, and meros, meaning part.
DNA and RNA contain functional units known as nucleotides, which are composed of a sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base. ATP (adenosine triphosphate) contains functional units called phosphate groups, which are crucial for the transfer of energy in cells.
Cell of living organisms!
cells are functional units
between functional units
One million functional units
I have no idea what you mean with "functional unit". The SI has units to measure lots of different things; basically there are seven base units (such as the meter, the second, and the kilogram), and several dozen derived units, i.e., units derived from the base units, for example meters/second for speed.