yes
Th clock speed is the processor speed. It is simply the amout of operations the processor can do per second. However if the processor has multiple cores, it will be as fast as number of cores * clock speed. Note that the processor speed is not the overall computer speed.
speed of a processor is measured by CMU(Clock Multiplier Unit). Formula:(speed of processor in Hz)/(FSB of processor)= CMU
The only way to increase the processor speed is by overclocking. Through overclocking, you can increase the overall speed of the processor.
No. It represents the clock speed of the processor. The clock speed is usually misinterpreted by many as the power of the processor, but the physical design of the processor has far more to do with the processors throughput than the clock speed itself.
No, a megabyte is a unit of storage capacity, not a unit for measuring the speed of a processor. The speed of a processor is typically measured in hertz (GHz), which indicates how many cycles the processor can execute in one second.
processor speed does not matter.
The processor (obviously)
Clock speed measures the speed and it's measured in megahertz.
The processor size or speed does not determine how much RAM your system needs. Generally speaking, the newer the system, the more RAM you can add. The amount of RAM slots on a motherboard and the motherboard's own subsystem (the BIOS) will determine how much RAM you can add to a particular motherboard.
The processor speed of the Toshiba Satellite A355D-S6930 AMD Turion X2 Ultra Dual-Core Mobile Processor Laptop is 2.1 GHz.
Yes
To add a new machine language instruction to an processor instruction set, you need to replace the microcode of the processor.