Asked by Kristin
Suppose Fred's Computers advertises that their new computer comes with exactly 1,200 megabytes of RAM in main memory. Why is this unlikely to be true?
Answers
Answered by
PsyDAG
The key to the incorrectness of the statement lies with the word "exactly." See
http://www.t1shopper.com/tools/calculate/
I hope this helps. thanks for asking.
http://www.t1shopper.com/tools/calculate/
I hope this helps. thanks for asking.
Answered by
Walker
It is not unlikely to be true, it can have exactly 1,200 mb of memory. 1000mb-1gb. So he could possibly have 1gb and 200mb of memory. :)
Answered by
annon
Please ignore the last two answers.
Suppose Fred's Computers advertises that their new computer comes with exactly 1,200 megabytes of RAM in main memory. Why is this unlikely to be true?
Answer: The reason this is unlikely true is due to the 1200MB of RAM. RAM comes in Increments. The lowest being 64MB. However to clear up the picture for you, here is how RAM is Divided, you have 256MB(Thats One Stick) Than 512MB(One or Two Sticks) Or 1GB = 1024MB. There is no way you can get 1200 even.
Suppose Fred's Computers advertises that their new computer comes with exactly 1,200 megabytes of RAM in main memory. Why is this unlikely to be true?
Answer: The reason this is unlikely true is due to the 1200MB of RAM. RAM comes in Increments. The lowest being 64MB. However to clear up the picture for you, here is how RAM is Divided, you have 256MB(Thats One Stick) Than 512MB(One or Two Sticks) Or 1GB = 1024MB. There is no way you can get 1200 even.
Answered by
annon
Count in increments of 256MB
Answered by
tvypuhwd
hxpauw
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