use a calculator..........
64*1000*60=3840000
If I calculated (mentally, mind you) correctly, there should be 64,000 instructions in ten minutes.
The SI unit for time is the second. Other units include fractions of a second, such as millisecond or microsecond; as well as minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years.
108 minutes
The answer depends on the units used for 222. Is it microsecond, hours, days, millennia. Who knows? And since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
One can run a "chkdsk" application on a Windows operating system computer by going to the online site "Errorsfixer" and following the detailed instructions. The whole process usually takes less than ten minutes to complete.
your on a computer you a calculatour
Most people have something like a Pentium computer running Windows, or a Macintosh. A computer like this can execute approximately 100 million instructions per second.Your brain is made up of about one trillion cells with 100 trillion connections between those cells. We might take a rough estimate and say it is handling 10 quadrillion instructions per second, but it really is hard to say.On this note I would guess that the human brain would be at least a yottabyte whether or not your brain chooses to 'save' is a different matter all together, we are all different and some people cant forget a thing when others cant remember where they left their car keys 10 minutes ago.
You reset a computer on a Chrysler 300 with a scan tool or by unhooking the battery for a few minutes.
The Manchester Baby was the first computer to run a program from memory, it ran its first program on June 21, 1948. The program was stored in a 32 word CRT based DRAM and consisted of 17 instructions; it ran for 52 minutes before reaching the correct answer of 131,072, after performing 3.5 million operations (for an effective CPU speed of 1.1 kIPS).The modified ENIAC was the second computer to run a program from memory, it ran its first program as a stored-program computer on September 16, 1948. The program was stored in the 100 word Function Table ROM switches as 2 digit instructions (allowing storage for up to 500 instructions).
Unhooking the battery for five minutes will reset the computer.
Crappy computer or bad site