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  2. Computer memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_memory

    Historical lowest retail price of computer memory and storage Electromechanical memory used in the IBM 602, an early punch multiplying calculator Detail of the back of a section of ENIAC, showing vacuum tubes Williams tube used as memory in the IAS computer c. 1951 8 GB microSDHC card on top of 8 bytes of magnetic-core memory (1 core is 1 bit.)

  3. PASS Sample Size Software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PASS_Sample_Size_Software

    PASS is a computer program for estimating sample size or determining the power of a statistical test or confidence interval. NCSS LLC is the company that produces PASS. NCSS LLC also produces NCSS (for statistical analysis). PASS includes over 920 documented sample size and power procedures.

  4. Test statistic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test_statistic

    Test statistic is a quantity derived from the sample for statistical hypothesis testing. [1] A hypothesis test is typically specified in terms of a test statistic, considered as a numerical summary of a data-set that reduces the data to one value that can be used to perform the hypothesis test.

  5. RAMP Simulation Software for Modelling Reliability ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAMP_Simulation_Software...

    RAMP Simulation Software for Modelling Reliability, Availability and Maintainability (RAM) is a computer software application developed by WS Atkins specifically for the assessment of the reliability, availability, maintainability and productivity characteristics of complex systems that would otherwise prove too difficult, cost too much or take too long to study analytically.

  6. Computer performance by orders of magnitude - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_performance_by...

    40×10 3: multiplication on Hewlett-Packard 9100A early desktop electronic calculator, 1968; 53×10 3: Lincoln TX-2 transistor-based computer, 1958 [2] 92×10 3: Intel 4004, first commercially available full function CPU on a chip, released in 1971; 500×10 3: Colossus computer vacuum tube cryptanalytic supercomputer, 1943

  7. Memory timings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_timings

    Memory timings or RAM timings describe the timing information of a memory module or the onboard LPDDRx. Due to the inherent qualities of VLSI and microelectronics, memory chips require time to fully execute commands. Executing commands too quickly will result in data corruption and results in system instability.

  8. Space–time tradeoff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space–time_tradeoff

    Here, space refers to the data storage consumed in performing a given task (RAM, HDD, etc.), and time refers to the time consumed in performing a given task (computation time or response time). The utility of a given space–time tradeoff is affected by related fixed and variable costs (of, e.g., CPU speed, storage space), and is subject to ...

  9. Random-access memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random-access_memory

    (For example, if a computer has 2 GB (1024 3 B) of RAM and a 1 GB page file, the operating system has 3 GB total memory available to it.) When the system runs low on physical memory, it can " swap " portions of RAM to the paging file to make room for new data, as well as to read previously swapped information back into RAM.