Trends ARE what defines a generation. The way people react, respond and recreate from mainstream trends differs one generation from the rest. The youth of society are those that creates the "trends", thus, a generation. You can tell a lot about a generation based upon its popular social trends.
My Generation - 2008 II Buck the Trend 3-24 was released on: USA: 8 October 2012
it varied significantly from computer to computer within each generation with large overlaps from generation to generation but the running trend has been for greater storage capacity in each successive generation.
The passing of customs and beliefs from one generation to another
A P4 usually refers to a fourth generation Pentium processor.
The 3rd generation iPod Touch is simply referred to as the "iPod Touch 3rd Generation". This simply means that this is the 3rd model of the iPod Touch. Apple began the "generation" trend with their devices with the release of the 2nd model of the iPod on 17 July, 2002.
a carrying capacity is the part of the population trend that has a stable trend with little to no changes making the population have a steady trend. its impact on populations has a major impact if the population is below the carrying capacity then deaths exceed births while if it is over then births exceed deaths.
it defines there generation, every generation inspires its own way of revolution
No, these practices have been around since the neolithic age (9,000 BC).
By most definitions of Generation X, I'd be a Gen X-er. Different sources have different birth years for each generation, and there is at least one which would define me as a Millennial.
Machine code is first generation. Low-level, machine-dependent, symbolic languages such as assembly language are second generation. All high-level, machine-independent languages are third generation. Fourth and fifth generation don't actually have any meaning since there is no "standard" to define these terms, although they are often used to classify specific types of third-generation languages.
4th generation of computers are acts as user define computers but 5th generation computers are act as automatic computers by means it doing its works automatically
The 1920s trend that focused on individual experiences, emotions, and the expression of personal freedom was the "Lost Generation." This term refers to a group of American writers who rejected traditional values and social norms, seeking to express their disillusionment after World War I through their work. Key figures of the Lost Generation include Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Gertrude Stein.