Buffer is a part of RAM where the input data are stored first..
George Macdonald
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7th Sep 2006
On 7 Sep 2006 03:03:18 -0700, "haresh" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>What is buffer?
In what context? It means different things to different people in
different areas of expertise. Most commonly, in software and *some*
hardware contexts, it's an area, usually of fixed size allocation, of fast
memory set aside for holding a block of data, which can be filled and
drained with differing granularity.
--
Rgds, George Macdonald
nobody@nowhere.net
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7th Sep 2006
On 7 Sep 2006 03:03:18 -0700, "haresh" <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote:
>What is buffer?
Google is your friend
NNN
Johannes
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7th Sep 2006
haresh wrote:
>
> haresh wrote:
> > What is buffer?
>
> Buffer is a part of RAM where the input data are stored first..
So why is it unbuffered?
jack
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7th Sep 2006
haresh <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
: What is buffer?
All your data are belong to us......LOL!
j.
krw
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7th Sep 2006
In article <(E-Mail Removed)>, (E-Mail Removed) says...
> haresh <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> : What is buffer?
>
> All your data are belong to us......LOL!
Bill, is that you?
--
Keith
Yousuf Khan
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8th Sep 2006
haresh wrote:
> haresh wrote:
>> What is buffer?
>
>
> Buffer is a part of RAM where the input data are stored first..
>