1. What is the difference in volatile and nonvolatile memory?
All electronic components are volatile but the most volatile components are: 1. Floppy Disk 2. NIC 3. Graphics Card 4. HDD 5. CD Drive 6. SMPS 7. RAM 8. Flash Memory
I'm not sure what you mean. If you mean 8 gigabyte Hard disk, yes, that's sufficient. If you mean 8.75 RAM, maybe. RAM and Hard disk are different things. RAM is memory that is volatile - it's deleted when you switch your computer off. The hard disk is non-volatile: It stays there forever, until you delete it.
85 is a 8 bit processor,number of flags are 5 and memory capacity is 64KB while 86 is a 16 bit processor ,number of flags are 9 and memory capacity is 1 MB.The main difference between 8085 and 8086 is that 8086 uses pipelining.
The 32 GB one can hold more songs and apps, as it has 4 times as much memory.
In an 8085 system, the memory word size required is 8 bits. This means that each memory location can store 8 bits or one byte of data. The 8085 processor accesses memory locations using these 8-bit memory addresses to read or write data during program execution. The memory word size of 8 bits allows the 8085 system to handle data in small, manageable chunks efficiently.
8 MB
if you have enough money, buy the 32gb because it has more memory and storage but if you are tight on cash and want it right now buy the 8 gb. the only difference is the memory size. hope this helped
The 2147 memory is 4096 X 1 bit static RAM. You need 8 chips to form 4K x 8.
8 words8 bytes8 blocksetc.
2048/128 = number of chips.
For an iPod, an 8 GB memory stick will hold approximately 2,000 songs.
For an 8 megapixel camera I would suggest a 2MB memory card,