depends if the Sram is good!
True. Reference is CompTIA A+ Guide to Managing & Maintaining your PC, 6e. Page 186
No. It slightly slows down the process.
In two basic stages: i) process - the computer needs, and is easily provided with, instructions about what to do with the data, and ii) data - readily accessible information that is accessed, operated upon, and results displayed by the instructions stored in the computer's instruction program.
The use of information technology in communication is two-fold. It allows for information to be stored after being gathered, and storage in different formats is still storage so it does not specifically matter how the information is stored. It also plays a role in the speed with information can be communicated between parties AFTER they create a query, retrieve it from storage, develop an understanding of it and either express the information to someone else OR take action based upon the information. It is possible to map the flow of information from point of origin through storage, retrieval and outcome (activity) based on it, and so we can certainly make a case for... The faster gathering of information. The faster storage of information. The faster retrieval of information. The one process that is LEAST easily mapped is the final decision making process an end user of information; human nature and capacity being the least consistent process in the known world.
Additional data and programs not being used by the processor are stored in
Each process running on a processor needs its own logical address space. This can only be realized if each process has its own page table. To support this, a processor that supports virtual memory must have a page table base register that is accessible by the operating system. For operating system security, this register is only accessible when the processor is in system mode. The operating system maintains information about each process in a process control block. The page table base address for the process is stored there. The operating system loads this address into the PTBR whenever a process is dispatched.
Generally speaking, then RAM is nearest to processor. CPU fetches all the data from RAM only. However, in reality there is something called Cache memory which come built-in in the processor. Data which is required most frequently is stored in it so that the processor can quickly fetch and process it.
Encoding is the process of inputting information into memory, where it can be stored and later retrieved. Retrieval is the process of accessing and bringing stored information out of memory for use. Both encoding and retrieval are essential components of memory processes.
SF 701
Frequently accessed data is often stored in a cache memory, which is a smaller, faster type of memory that sits between the main memory (RAM) and the processor. Caching helps improve performance by allowing the processor to access frequently used data more quickly than if it had to retrieve it from the main memory every time.
The process of recalling information stored in memory. Types of retrieval are recall and recognition.
formatting