Answer:
do u have different networks too?
<u>Purposes of finder </u>:-
It allows the user to do the following mentioned (below) jobs such as:
1) It provides interference in
•coping •moving •deleting etc.
2) It is also associated in the acts of openings and navigation of:
•folders •files
3) Moreover, it can also move windows anywhere on the desktop.
4) Finder is also beneficial in a way that it is capable of revealing different elements and materials or softwares like:
•Storage devices
•Applications
•Files and folders etc
Answer: Where the guide lines?
Explanation: I’ll help but where the guidelines?
hi
Counting a sequence of statements without any decisions or branches as one control structure (as many computer scientists do),the if, if-else, and if-else-if ladders as one control structure,the three types of loops (while, do-while, and for) as three different control structures,the break and continue statements, in the context of loops, as one more (although this can be debatable),the switch/case control structure as one,the call/return mechanism as one,the ability to specify and call a callback function as one,the goto/label as one,and the setjmp/longjmp non-local goto as one,
Answer:
The space available will vary between 800 GB (100%) and 400 GB (50%) of the total disks, depending on the RAID level.
The OS will handle the RAID as a single disk.
Explanation:
Each RAID level implements parity and redundancy in a different way, so the amount of disks used for this extra information will reduce the space available for actual storage.
Usual RAID levels are:
<u>RAID 0:</u> does not implement any redundancy or parity, so you will have available 100% of the total storage: 8 x 100 GB = 800 GB
<u>RAID 1:</u> Duplicates all the information in one disk to a second disk. Space is reduced in half: 400 GB
<u>RAID 5:</u> Uses the equivalent of 1 disk of parity data distributed evenly on each disk, meaning the space available is
of the total disks:
of 800 GB = 700 GB
Writting and reading the information on a RAID storage is handled by a raid controller, either implemented in hardware or software. The OS will "see" a single disk and will read or write information as usual.