In hardware terms, data travels along bus or a network. Both can take various shapes and forms with different characteristics. Commonly known bus systems are the USB, SATA, IDE or PCI bus systems.
In abstract terms, data traverse layers of code or travels along a route from A to B.
If I am correct in assuming that you mean on the motherboard then this would be the bus lines.
Information sent from the computer is called data.
The specific term is "input data". The general term "data" can refer to "input data", "output data", "stored data" inside the computer, the data being processed by the computer's CPU, etc.
pito
If a coworker inside a classified flash drive into am unclassified computer, that IS called data compromise.
The memory in the computer called RAM contains data. For instance if you open Microsft Word then that progrom is loaded into your RAM memory. This makes the program rum faster because the CPU does not have to access it from the hard drive which is a slow process. So the data in memory travels from the RAM to the CPU for processing. The other way RAM travels with with your video card. Video cards have a direct link to the CPU so they can process faster, this includes memory. So memory travels to the CPU and to the Video when needing. Remember memory does not travel anyware, its the data inside the memory that travels. Hope this helps.
ram
Inside your computer is something called a sound card; this is what you plug your headphones into. What the sound card does is it reads data on your computer and determines what sound needs to be played and when, then it takes a copy of the data that it has determined is sound and instantly converts it into a signal which is sent to your headphones, then your headphones convert it into sound. Simple
The Processor is the brains of the computer to process the information. All of the data that you are working from is from the Hard Drive.
Processing- A way in which computers manipulate data and mostly takes place in the CPU.
data sher
IO or I/O means Input and Output, meaning that the data travels in both directions.