read/write head
The term used to define the wires on a motherboard that move data from one part of a computer to another is "bus." Buses are electrical pathways that facilitate communication between various components, such as the CPU, memory, and peripheral devices. They can be classified into different types, such as data buses, address buses, and control buses, each serving a specific function in data transfer.
Trains
Yes. Plug the USB part into a USB port on your computer and insert your harddrive onto a TRANSFER CABLE and there you go. I have heard you may need a certain software (Xplorer 360 or Xport 360"?)
Inside a computer, a bus transfers data between components. A bus is thought of as being the physical wires that make the connection, but these days the software that controls data transfer is also thought of as part of the bus.
Open your brain then look for a part of your brain thats called the memory center and transfer the data on to your computer. Simples
Yes, a digital camera can be considered part of a computer system, especially when it is connected to a computer for data transfer or image processing. It contains electronic components that process images digitally, similar to how a computer processes data. Additionally, modern digital cameras often include their own operating systems and can perform computing tasks independently.
Printing is not a method for copying data to another part of the worksheet.
please elaborate on "a strong data"
DMA, Direct Memory Access, is a method of transferring data from the computer's RAM to another part of the computer without processing it using the CPU.
Input devices connect to the computer and they pass data into the Processor where it can be processed.
No. "Input" means getting data INTO the computer.
A microprocessor is the main part of a computer. It is the engine of a computer that has been created on only one chip. It stores data, moves data from one memory location to another, communicates with other parts of the computer, can do computations, and is controlled by assembly language instructions, that it fetches from some memory.