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.
RAM can be
compared to a person's short-term memory and the hard disk to the long-term
memory. The short-term memory focuses on work at hand, but can only keep so
many facts in view at one time. If short-term memory fills up, your brain
sometimes is able to refresh it from facts stored in long-term memory. A
computer also works this way. If RAM fills up, the processor needs to
continually go to the hard disk to overlay old data in RAM with new, slowing
down the computer's operation. Unlike the hard disk which can become completely
full of data so that it won't accept any more, RAM never runs out of memory. It
keeps operating, but much more slowly than you may want it to.
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