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Memory and Storage Understanding Computers

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Memory and Storage Understanding Computers

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出 版 社:Time-Life Books

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I S B N:0809456834

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    Next to the speed with which a computer can perform its basic functions~adding, subtracting, multiplying, dividing, and comparing one value with an-other--no measure of such a machine s potential is more revealing than itscapacity for storing, and recalling on cue, information and the instructions forhandling it. Without the ability to squirrel away data and programs, a computerwould not deserve the name. Like the simplest electronic calculator, it couldhandle only two numbers and one operation at a time, an unacceptable ]imi-tation for any but the simplest of data-processing tasks. Computers store information and programs by means that are, in essence,either electronic or mechanical. Electronic methods, generally called memory,are highly valued for their ability to keep pace with the computer s centralprocessing unit, or CPU, which typically shuttles bits of information and programinstructions in and out of memory several million times a second. Because theseelectronic circuits are expensive and because the most common varieties losetheir contents when power to the computer is interrupted for even a split second,the role of memory is that of a temporary niche for data and instructions that mustflow quickly in and out of the CPU. The memories of computers that were constructed during the early part of the1940s rarely exceeded a handful or two of bytes, a unit of measurement equalto eight bits, or binary digits. (In their formative years, computers often handledbits--the basic on-off currency of their circuits~one at a time. It is commonnowadays for a computer to work with groups of bits~known as words--of two,four, and even eight bytes, a feature that by itself can increase the speed of acomputer many times over.) Memory grew slowly, taking until the mid-1960s to pass the megabyte (one-million-byte) mark, but the advent in the 1960s of integrated-circuit chips--microscopic assemblages of transistors and other electronic components--brought with it a tremendous increase in the memory capacity of computers.Today, even the most unpretentious desktop computer may contain more than500,000 bytes of memory and have the potential for controlling millions of bytes.Some supercomputers, such as the Cray 2 and the ETA1~, have access to morethan two gigabytes of memory---or two billion bytes.

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