Saturday 3 September 2011

Memory/Storage

RAM  
RAM (random access memory) is the place in a computer where the operating system,
application programs, and data in current use are kept so that they can be quickly
reached by the computer's processor. RAM is much faster to read from and write to than
the other kinds of storage in a computer, the hard disk, floppy disk, and CD-ROM.
However, the data in RAM stays there only as long as your computer is running. When
you turn the computer off, RAM loses its data. When you turn your computer on again,
your operating system and other files are once again loaded into RAM, usually from your
hard disk.
Punch cards
A card on which data can be recorded in the form of punched holes.
 ROM
ROM is "built-in" computer memory containing data that normally can only be read, not
written to. ROM contains the programming that allows your computer to be "booted
up" or regenerated each time you turn it on. Unlike a computer's random access memory
(RAM), the data in ROM is not lost when the computer power is turned off.  
The ROM is sustained by a small long-life battery in your computer.
Hard disk
 Hard disk is a computer storage device which saves and retrieves the data when
required. Its capacity is much greater than the computer memory (RAM, ROM). Data on
hard disk is stored and retrieved from electromagnetically charged surface. Today we can save huge amount of data on a single hard disk. Now hard disks can
contain several billion bytes.  
Floppy disk
 A diskette is a random access, removable data storage medium that can be used with
personal computers. The term usually refers to the magnetic medium housed in a rigid
plastic cartridge measuring 3.5 inches square and about 2 millimeters thick. Also called a
"3.5-inch diskette," it can store up to 1.44 megabytes (MB) of data.
Tape
In computers, tape is an external storage medium, usually both readable and writable,
can store data in the form of electromagnetic charges that can be read and also erased. A
tape drive is the device that positions, writes from, and reads to the tape.
 CD
A compact disc [sometimes spelled  disk] (CD) is a small, portable, round medium for
electronically recording, storing, and playing back audio, video, text, and other
information in digital form.  
DVD
DVD (digital versatile disc) is an optical disc technology that is expected to rapidly
replace the CD-ROM disc (as well as the audio compact disc) over the next few years.
The digital versatile disc (DVD) holds 4.7 gigabyte of information on one of its two
sides, or enough for a 133-minute movie

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