Want this question answered?
kjhkjhkhkjhjhj
The 8086/8088 processor is a 16 bit processor. In a 16 bit two's complement notation, the maximum number is 0x7FFF, or 32767, while the minimum number is 0x8000, or -32768.
Magnetic drum memory or magnetic drum storage, a type of computer memory/storage that is now long obsolete.
Random Access Memory, as verses Sequential Access Memory (delay lines, magnetic tape, magnetic drum, magnetic disk, etc.)
A 14 bit address can specify 214 or 16,384 different locations.
magnetic tape
It depends on the motherboard. If you can find out what type of motherboard you have, you can look up what type of memory and how much of it you can install into the memory banks. Keep in mind that the operating system that you have may limit how much of the installed memory you can actually use.
There are two types of storage loops exits in magnetic bubble memory.
The maximum memory that can be dynamically allocated depends on the size of the heap memory. Dynamic blocks of memory can be allocated in system heap until it is not full.
Some examples of dynamic units are magnetic disks, magnetic drums, and magnetic tapes
Yes. The ability of a material to retain magnetism after the magnetizing force is removed is magnetic memory.
Many different types of memory were used in first generation computers, a few of the most commonly used were:electrostatic cathode ray tubes (DRAM)sonic delay lines (DSAM)electrostatic selectron tubes (SRAM)magnetic drums (NVSSAM)magnetic disks (NVSSAM)magnetic core stacks (NVSRAM)Magnetic core memory eventually became dominate.Second and third generation computers continued to use sonic delay line memory, magnetic disk memory, and magnetic core memory (with magnetic core memory still dominating).Late in the third generation computers solid state memory chips replaced all other types of memory.Fourth generation computers used only solid state memory chips.