*shrug* Personally if it doesn't run a version of an Office Type Suite, has a keyboard for it's primary input, and a way to manage it from an administrative side then I wouldn't consider it a computer. But Webster says: general-purpose computer equipped with a microprocessor and designed to run especially commercial software (as a word processor or World Wide Web browser) for an individual user. That's a personal computer which would be the class they fall in. It's to specialized for that and everyone knows it. Though that does make somethings clearer now.