The 2 main data transfer modes are UDMA and PIO under the ATA or IDE hard drives. Many recent hard drives use SATA and have PIO to fall back on if there is an issue.
ASCII & Binary
Data transfer between the central computer and input and output devices may be handled in a variety of modes The techniques of data transfer are: Programmed I/O Interrupt driven Direct Memory Access (DMA)
Two data transfer modes used by hard drives are UDMA and PIO. UDMA is more popular and stands for Ultra Direct Memory Access.
There can be two modes in a data set. For example, in the data set {0,1,2,3,3,4,5,5,9}, there are two modes: 3 and 5.
DMA and PIO modes hahah wrong its so wrong
FTP (File Transfer Protocal) supports both ASCII & Binary.
Yes there can be more than 2 modes in a data set. It is called multimodal.
It means it has two modes.
Yes. For instance, the dataset {1, 2, 2, 3, 4, 4} has modes 2 and 4.
bimodal
DMA which stands for (Direct memory access ) and PIO (Programmed Input/Output) There are 5 PIO Modes from 0-4 and 7 DMA modes from 0-6
The mode is the data point that occurs the most number of times; in addition the data could be bimodal (2 modes) or multimodal (3 or more modes).