Actually, contrary to popular belief, yes. It does. Information is stored on hard drives using electrons. Electrons have mass (and I'm assuming you're using this computer on planet Earth) which is being acted upon by the Earth's gravitational pull, therefore giving them weight. So, I'm sorry all of you out there who think that this is a ridiculously stupid question, but it's really not a dumb question and the answer is not no.
yes
sodium chloride
yes, the weight of anode is decreased & added to the weight of the cathode during electroplating
Absolutely; modern computers have a modular design which allows additional memory to be added if desired.
Yes, after you eat you are heavier than before you eat because the weight of the food is added to your weight.
It would stretch, and its tension would increase.
To multiply is to increase a number by multiplication (3 x 3 = 9), or increase something (the weight increased when another brick was added to the load).
Yes , the volume of water will increase if salt is added , as salt is a solute and water is a solvent. When salt is added , it affects the weight of molecules and the liquid itself.
No. If the water doesn't overflow, then the addition of the fish will increase the total weight of the tank and its contents by 50 pounds.
Data integrity
Higher-order abilities by information added to data allow users to become experts rather than simply perform operations.
yes because it is the effect if gravity as the mass increase the weight would also and so the ship would sink