#1 hard code#2 soft code#3 driveability
Renult, peugout and citron
Computer memory and had drive memory have become something that people have confused as the computer age progresses, although no truly technical person would ever get them up. Both hard drive space and the amount of random access memory a computer has can effect a system’s performance, but they affect it in different ways. Computer memory is designed to be a temporary storage area for information that the computer needs while it is running. Information does not get permanently written to the memory chips and the computer only stores it for as long as it needs it. The hard drive and other disc drives are used for longer term storage of information. The confusion between memory and hard drive space came about possibly when Windows instituted virtual pages. If the computer needs more memory, virtual pages function like the swap space on a Unix of Linux computer. The virtual pages use hard drive space to store information. The upside is that programs can run on computers that do not quite meet the computer memory requirements for the application. The downside is that doing so slows the speed of the computer and the application down. Upgrading a computer memory in your system will improve speed, especially if you do not currently have enough memory to handle all the tasks you use your computer for on a regular basis. Adding memory is in many ways, like adding additional lanes to a highway that has become crowded or adding a new road system. The number of cars or pieces of data for the analogy, going in and out of the memory clog up the roadways. Put more roadways in and the cars have alternate paths. Removing the excess traffic lets the cars get to and from their intended destination more easily. Putting in computer memory is relatively easy. The latest forms are DDR and DDR2. To install new memory, the user must have the type that his computer has the slots for. The DDR and DDR2 connections, although they are different versions of the same technology, do not have the same interface. The slots for the different types of computer memory are not interchangeable.
It is a problem in the cars computer standing for Programmable Read Only Memory
There are things called memory savers, memory minders, computer memory keepers, etc. that you connect to the electrical system before disconnecting the battery. They keep the computers from losing their memories while you change batteries. Click on the related link below to see an example.
The newest types of cars are the cars that run on water.
The type of cars that are used.
German cars
Old Cars
The Computer Chips first used in cars were in 1981, was in the carburetor. General Motors and Corvettes were the first pioneers in placing computer chips in cars.
Yes , but it depends where you get it from
no they have lcd screens with memory
All types of cars I know are 82 types of cars, but there may be a lot more then 82.