March 21 Daily Directions
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Current events can be found in our Memory News section. |
The following is presented on behalf of today’s proclaimed Memory Day. Click the green calendar to read the adjoining content. And enjoy!
Today in Context
Selling Your Computer: “Or maybe that cool new programming language you’ve been dying to try requires more memory than what your computer currently has. ”
A Few Common Computer Errors: “Insufficient memory will cause errors as well. That’s why software programs include minimum memory requirements.”
Improving The Development Process: “How Can I Make My publication (or part of my publication)… run faster? easier to re-create? with less code? run from memory? smaller? automatic? generate code on its own?”
PC Error Messages – What You Need To Know: “One of the most common error messages that you’ll ever see indicate that there just isn’t enough memory to handle a request.”
The Best Way To Buy Software: “If a manufacturer advertises a software product will run on an XP computer with 64 gigabytes of memory, it may not take into account your computer’s specific configuration.”
Major Problems with Windows Vista: “We come from a time when Windows ran on less than 40MB!! With sufficient memory of course, Vista’s size isn’t that big of a deal. That is, until the computer starts to run slower.”
Netcom3 Internet Security Software – Product Review: “This utility alone will maximize your CPU’s processing power, memory, RAM, and internet settings. Its Pop Up Blocker acts like a firewall and prevents the installment of script viruses.”
EvidenceNuker – Product Review: “With Windows, we have three main storage areas: files, the hard drive, and the computer’s memory. To optimize usage, Windows stores the files and programs we load into its memory while it periodically saves things.”
Buying a Computer: “By “fastest and biggest,” we mean the computer with the fastest processor, the fastest modem, the biggest memory, and the biggest hard drive capacity.”
Ruby Jobs: “It also has a dynamic type system and automatic memory management; it is therefore similar in varying respects to Smalltalk, Python, Perl, Lisp, Dylan, Pike, and CLU.”
Assembly / Machine Language Jobs: “Is based on mnemonics that symbolize processing steps (instructions), processor registers, memory locations, and other language features.”