This is an ITT question...you can look it up in your book in chapter 11 starting at page 421
so you know understand how to answer the question
Edit: the page is actually 424, and the answer is
0 = Halt
1 = Single User
2 = Multiuser without NFS
3 = Multiuser
4 = User defined
5 = Multiuser with X
6 = Reboot
in case some people don't have their book, your welcome.
Shows the relative number of individual organisms at each trophic level.
There are several Linux distros that can be installed on a PlayStation 3, including Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian, Gentoo, OpenSUSE, and Yellow Dog Linux. Each of these distros have slightly different methods of installation, and a single question could not adequately explain the intricacies of installing all of them. Below are related questions that deal with a specific distro. If you update to the newest firmware V3.21 you are no longer allowed to install another operating system on the PS3.
2n2 where n is the energy level
Because there is less energy available at each feeding level, there is a limit to how many organisms can be a part of each progressive level.
There is no one "current Linux operating system" due to the fact that Linux is developed and distributed in various forms by many different individuals and corporations. The current version of Linux depends on which of these "distributions" you are interested in installing. For example, a popular distribution of Linux tailored for use as a Desktop system is Ubuntu (www.ubuntu.com), which is distributed by the company Canonical. The current release of Ubuntu is 8.04, which was released in April this year. There are literally hundreds of distributions freely available online, but other distributions which are of note in the desktop arena include Fedora (www.fedoraproject.org), openSUSE (www.opensuse.org) and Debian (www.debian.org), each of which have their own advantages and disadvantages. Each distribution has its own release schedule, but you can find out what the current version is (and download it) from the official websites.
Windows and Linux use a device letter to identify each storage device.
describe the formation of this bond and the total number of electrons in theorbitals of each energy level.
Windows and Linux use device letters to identify each storage device on a computer.
That depends on whether you are asking whether more people use Windows or Linux or which system supports more users. The maximum number of users in a modern Linux system is 4,294,967,295. Windows doesn't have any specific limit that has been published, but each account takes up a significant amount of space, limiting the number to well below the limit in Linux. As to how many people use them, more people use Windows on their personal computers than Linux.
"Run Levels" in Linux are different startup or shutdown settings that can be used at any time to force Linux into a given state using the "init" command. Level 0 forces a total system shutdown. Level 1 switches to "maintanance mode" and only allows the system administrator to log in. This is about the same as Windows "safe mode with command prompt". Levels 2 and 5 can be defined differently, depending on what version of Linux you are using. Typically, one of these is set to start the graphical user interface, another to start only the command line, and so on. The exact results, again, always depends on what version of Linux is used. Level 6 forces the system to reboot. It should be helpful to note that runlevels are not in every Linux system. Systemd-based setups do not have runlevels. The closest they have are "targets," though these are not completely analogous to runlevels.
each level code is just the levels number
ratio-level data