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Look up: ram

  1. RAM
    acronym: random-access memory
    Found on http://cdiac.ornl.gov/pns/acronyms.html#

  2. RAM
    Random Access Memory.
    Found on http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/basics/bsfgloss

  3. RAM
    RAM is an abbreviation for Random Access Memory (R/W); Red Academicia de Mexico (Mexican Academic Network)
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/nol.php

  4. Ram
    The bow of ancient warships had a ram, a rostrum, in the waterline. In that way an enemy ship could be rammed and sunk without having to board and engage in dangerous close combat. The best preserved ram is the 2.25 m long and 465 kg heavy Athlit ram, found in 1980, displayed at the National Maritime Museum, Haifa, Israel. Inside the bronze ram some of the ship's wood is still preserved. Similar rams were once displayed at the Actium Naval Monument in Nikopolis as well as on Forum Romanum in Rome. The last time a ram was used in battle was at Lissa off the Dalmatian coast in 1866. The Austrian Ferdinand Max rammed the Italian ship Re d'Italia, which quickly sank with hundreds of sailors. Both warships were rather traditional wooden ships with sail and steam engines. Many warships still carried rams around World War I.
    Found on http://www.abc.se/~pa/uwa/glossary.htm

  5. RAM
    Random Access Memory. A computer's working memory, where programs store information when they are running. The bigger it is, the less time your computer will have to wait to get data from the hard disk drive.
    Found on http://www.mantex.co.uk/samples/glo-5.ht

  6. RAM
    Random Access Memory, details ...
    Found on http://www.cryer.co.uk/glossary/r/index.

  7. RAM
    Random access memory. Electronic chips, usually known as memory, holding digital information while there is power applied to it. Its capacity is measured in kilobytes. This is the computer's work area.
    Found on http://www.zoo.co.uk/~z0001325/Glossary.

  8. ram
    [n] - a tool for driving or forcing something by impact 2. [n] - uncastrated adult male sheep 3. [v] - strike or drive against with a heavy impact
    Found on http://www.webdictionary.co.uk/definitio

  9. RAM
    Random Access Memory
    Found on http://www.geocities.com/ikind_babel/bab

  10. RAM
    Random Access Memory. This is the memory used by the computer whilst it is working, to hold the operating system, programs being run and program data. This type of memory is ‘volatile`, that is to say the contents of the memory chips is lost when the computer is switched off! Memory is measured in Megabytes (MB).
    Found on http://www.oak.co.uk/Support_Glossary.ph

  11. RAM
    Shortened from the first letters of Random Access Memory (memory stored in the computer and immediately available for use and updating).
    Found on http://www.testing1212.co.uk/a.htm

  12. RAM
    (Digital cameras and photo printers) Random Access Memory. The user can read and write data from/onto this type of memory. RAM is used to temporarily store both data and programs. As opposed to ROM, all memory stored in RAM is lost when the power is turned off and is therefore called volatile memory. (SIMM)
    Found on http://www.olympus.co.uk/consumer/208_10

  13. RAM
    RAM (random access memory) is the place in a computer where the operating system, application programs, and data in current use are kept so that they can be quickly reached by the computer's processor. RAM is much faster to read from and write to than the other kinds of storage in a computer, the hard disk, floppy disk, and CD-ROM. However, the dat
    Found on http://www.mcsx.co.uk/glossary.php

  14. RAM
    Random Access Memory - this is the place within the computer where information is stored on a temporary basis - when the computer is switched off, information in RAM is lost
    Found on http://www.archivemag.co.uk/

  15. RAM
    Random Access Memory, the standard operating memory of the computer.
    Found on http://www.micro2000uk.co.uk/hardware_gl

  16. RAM
    Acronym for Random Access Memory. The memory in a computer in a computer that stores data temporarily while you are working on it. Data stored in RAM is lost forever when power is interrupted to the machine if it has not been saved to another medium, such as floppy or hard disk.
    Found on http://www.traditionalmusic.co.uk/music%

  17. ram
    the closing and sealing component on a blowout preventer. One of three types--blind, pipe, or shear--may be installed in several preventers mounted in a stack on top of the wellbore. Blind rams, when closed, form a seal on a hole that has no drill pipe in it; pipe rams, when closed, seal around the pipe; shear rams cut through drill pipe and then form a seal.
    Found on http://www.workover.co.uk/og/q.htm

  18. ram
    the closing and sealing component on a blowout preventer. One of three types--blind, pipe, or shear--may be installed in several preventers mounted in a stack on top of the wellbore. Blind rams, when closed, form a seal on a hole that has no drill pipe in it; pipe rams, when closed, seal around the pipe; shear rams cut through drill pipe and then form a seal.
    Found on http://www.workover.co.uk/og/r.htm

  19. RAM
    Random Access Memory. Memory that can be altered and is used to store files. See CHIP RAM and FAST RAM.
    Found on http://www.amigahistory.co.uk/r.html

  20. RAM
    Random Access Memory: This is reusable computer memory, available to all programs on a computer. A computer with 32M of RAM has about 32 million bytes of memory that programs can use. RAM is read/write memory, as opposed to ROM which is read-only memory.
    Found on http://www.pcblues.co.uk/help_glossary.h

  21. ram
    A large, pointed beam extending from the hull, or front, of an ancient warship. It was used to ram into the side of an enemy ship, making it easier to board.
    Found on http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/temetfutue/gl

  22. RAM
    Random Access Memory
    Found on http://www.nano.org.uk/nano/glossary.htm

  23. RAM
    Random Access Memory
    Found on http://www.dtmedia.co.uk/r.htm

  24. RAM
    Reliability, Availability and Maintainability
    Found on http://www.dtmedia.co.uk/r.htm

  25. RAM
    Radar Absorbent Material
    Found on http://www.dtmedia.co.uk/r.htm


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23 November 2009

This day in history:
At sixteen minutes past five on 23rd November 1963, a British television institution was born. Doctor Who would go on to become the longest-running science-fiction programme in the world, eventually spawning twenty six seasons of adventures from 1963 to 1989. In total, eight actors have played the part of Gallifrey's most famous Time Lord. From the very first - William Hartnell in 1963 - to the very last - Paul McGann, in the 1996 TV Movie - the Doctor has wandered through time and space in his trusty time machine, an old type-40 TARDIS (Time and Relative Dimensions in Space). Although appearing to be nothing more than a battered blue police box, it is in fact vastly bigger on the inside than on the outside, and always departs with its familiar wheezing, groaning sound. read more

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