768 MB RAM is good for Windows XP only. If you want the more recent Vista or 7, maybe try upgrading to at least 1 GB.
An OS reside in HDD, SSD, flash drive or CD/DVD. When you boot the computer the kernel is copied to RAM. Now other parts of OS will be loaded to RAM as and when required.
32 bit OS support max 2^32 bit = 4GB RAM
Bios, ram, rom, cache, page fault, peripheral interface mismatch, access, os, version mismatch
Based on its sheer configurability, a modern Linux kernel takes the cake by far. it is still possible to use a modern kernel with a basic userland in 4 MB of RAM.
You could try www.farm-bot.com They have a Mac OS X and Windows farmville bot and it works perfectly. good luck..
64 bit
depends on your motherboard and how much is best depends on if you are running a 32 or 64 bit OS. most people have a 32 bit OS, which can support a maximum of 4 GB of ram. in general DDR3 ram with the most capacity (ie 2GB) and speed (ie 2133 MHz) would be best
No, the OS, which stands for operating system, is stored on your hard drive.
no. OS is after Bootup which is after POST.
yes just x32 OS cannot
no, nothing remains in ram after your computer is turned off (unless it's static ram but hardly anyone has that anymore) in sleep mode your OS does remain in ram but your computer isn't off in hibernate mode, your computer is off and your OS state is written to the hard drive, so that it can be loaded back into RAM more quickly
No, RAM is never permanent memory. It's the random memory that is cleared out. The OS is always stored in the actual harddrive of a device.
knoppix could probably run on that, but it is primarily a live disk os, so it might have issues if you want to use it as a desktop or server
1.99ghz is way more powerful than 1.4mhz.
a 32-bit OS is limited to 4 Gigabytes of ram
there is nothing bad in the android P 768.it is the best phone you can find.
32bit OS will only support 3gb of ram, upgrade to windows 7 x64 or other 64 bit os