Ram seek time is the amount of time the ram takes to find the given piece of memory after receiving the command from the cpu. Average ram seek times are around 4-3 nano seconds.
If you installed the RAM yourself then make sure the computer Chip of RAM is clicked in. If that is not the problem then seek technical advice because it might be your computer.
what is seek time
Actually it is quite the opposite. The more RAM you have the more speed at which data can be transferred to the RAM. An example is if you have 512 Mb of RAM then 512 Mb of data will be transferred to the RAM at a time, but if you upgrade it to 1 GB of RAM then 1 GB of data will be transferred to the RAM at a time verses the 512 Mb. So the speed at which the RAM stores data will increase if the size of the RAM is increased. I hope this answers your question.
The inventor of the RAM card is Robert Dennard. He was employed by IBM at the time. RAM stands for Random Access memory.
Whatever do you mean with "clearing the RAM"? - RAM memory is cleared every time you turn the computer off.
No, it is not supposed to blink. You have a problem. Seek out a professional.
Installing RAM in pairs can save time and money.
Ram's mother sent him to the store to get 9 large pineapples. Ram could only carry two pineapples at a time. How many trips to the store did Ram have to make?
If you shopped for RAM put into your computer to make sure your gaming is the fastest it can be, then the lower the latency the faster the RAM. Latency is the time when the memory controller starts to grab a line of code, there is a delay and when RAM sends out the line of code there is another delay. The time is takes RAM to find and send code is called latency. So when shopping find RAM with the lowest latency.
RAM speed is measured in MHz, PC rating or NS (nanoseconds).
The ram of a computer is just how fast it can look something up in the least amount of time, and the speed is how fast it can process what the ram found.
Ram is used for temporary storage. Ram stands for random access memory.