Some microprocessors have cache memory; this is high speed memory and, if you're lucky and a program is small, it may entirely run in cache memory. All microprocessors have memory as registers - these aren't memory in the conventional sense, but are temporary locations to store values being worked on, addresses in memory and so on.
french for a memory (not memory itself, but A memory).
Retrospective memory is the kind of memory about things that had happened, while prospective memory is the kind of memory about future that one plan to do.
if your memory is worth talking about then yes
Working Memory
The word memory refers to our ability to recall events and people from our past. A sentence with the word memory might be "All we've got left is a memory of the way things used to be".
There is no microprocessor with !t of address memory, only virtual memory. the firt one was the 80486.
the principle function of memory interfacing is to enable the microprocessor to read or write into a register of the memory chip
NO
Microcontroller = (microprocessor+memory+peripherals) on a single chip
it has a memory
A microprocessor doesn't usually have memory and interfaces to perpherals, so these need to be added.
Nope.
High speed memory that reside between the microprocessor and RAM in a computer.
Cache memory is random access memory (RAM) that a computer microprocessor can access more quickly than it can access regular RAM. As the microprocessor processes data, it looks first in the cache memory and if it finds the data there (from a previous reading of data), it does not have to do the more time-consuming reading of data from larger memory.
Different microprocessor can address different amounts of memory. The motherboard design should allow for maximising the physical memory to what the microprocessor can address
cache memory
RIMM