well considering the triginometry involved and all the binary access codes...not to mention the miniture cirtcuits needed to compute the information to the rest of the computer through a circulatory proccess from the control center (otherwise known as the motherboard)...and because x = 2 and the JPG of this binary access code is the same as y = -5...can the CPU think for itself...well considering all the robotic features involved...can the brain think for itself...lets see then...the brain is a major organ in the body and is needed to function...without the brain you are doomed to the lairs of Satan...so the nervous circuits are needed in order to function in the brain and same with all the circulatory wires that are connected to the CPU...the answer is no...the CPU cannot think for itself...it needs a user to compute instructions to it in order to function.
LOL xD
The CPU heatsink, then thermal paste and the CPU itself.
Yes, the CPU itself is a processing device, it is the "brain" of the computer. CPU = Central *Processing* Unit
Input/Output (I/O) Unit
Assuming the CPU you're talking about is the computer itself, the Microprocessor processes the data on the computer, it is also known as the CPU.
Not usually, unless the CPU is less than 6 months old.
A CPU camera lens has electrical contacts on it. This means that it also has the auto focus option, which is where the lens will focus itself.
The CPU (processor?) handles all processes run on the computer, so in this case it processes and sends data to the hard drive (storage). You can think of the cpu a bit like your brain, in a way it controls everything else connected to the computer and is itself probably the most important computer component.
i think it is the CPU
It happens if you are using 16 bit applications.
Heatsinks and fans are used on CPUs to help cool them down so that they are not destroyed. A heatsink is a piece of metal placed on the CPU to distribute heat away from the CPU itself.
No. The CPU is NOT a storage device. It is where the computer does the "thinking" and actual data processing. In fact, the CPU IS the computer itself.
It might not be your CPU at fault, maybe your other hardware can't keep up with your CPU and your CPU has to slow down for them. If you think that this is not the case, you can always go to your bios and overclock your CPU.