No. RAM is "volatile" memory which means when you turn off the computer it loses the information. a Hard Drive is the device that stores your documents and files and retains this information even when the power is turned off.
RAM is much faster than a hard drive and it used by the computer as temporary memory that it works to/from.
DVD and RAM are not permanent storage devices.
RAM and Hard Disk both are memory storage devices. Which OS you have on the machine in question ? Gabriel winadmin.co.uk
No. ROM and RAM are primary storage. Examples of secondary storage would be floppy disk, hard disk, flash drive, etc. haahahaha
Storage of anything that can't be kept in internal RAM. Some examples are:DatabasesThe filesystemOSVirtual memoryetc.Also the one hard disk is usually used for all of these at the same time.
Saving
12000000 tb
Rom or secondary storage like the hard disk
RAM (Random Access "Memory") stores information temporarily while the power is on. Hard Disk "Space" stores information permanently regardless of whether the power is on or off. Computer specifications usually specify RAM as system "memory" (like 2GB DDR2 MEMORY) and refer to Hard Disk storage as "Hard Drive(s)", system "storage", or "Disk Space" (like 320GB HARD DRIVE). Think of the Hard Drive as a storage shed and the RAM as the playground. The computer gets the programs/data from the hard drive and pulls them out temporarily into the playground for you to use, then stores them back in the shed when you are done.
volatile
ram stores instructions and a hard - disk stores data
gigabyte or GB. the same term is used for RAM.
RAM is not permanent storage, so nothing can be saved to it. It is just working memory where you do your work until it is saved. Then it is saved to storage like a hard disk or a USB drive or other storage device.