Answer:
I use the internet for a variety of activities. In a typical day, I'd use the internet to do the following:
- I check my email
- follow the latest trends and news on popular social media channels
- communicate with friends, family and clients via social media channels
- I research business topics
- I use it for my work as a management consultant
The internet is now a primary utility. I currently spend more on internet data subscription than on fuel, electricity, phone call credit, and even water. It now has a tremendous impact on my daily life.
Cheers
<h2>
Answer:</h2>
There are a whole lot of encapsulation or information hiding examples in the Bible. Here are about 3 of them:
i. <em>The parables of Jesus</em>. Many times Jesus spoke in parables to teach His disciples and until He's explained they would not get the meaning.
ii. <em>The interpretation of dreams by Joseph</em>. A noticeable example is the one of the baker and the butler in Genesis 40. Each of them - the butler and the baker - both had a dream but the actual meaning and interpretation of those dreams were not known by them.
iii. <em>Peter walking on water</em> is yet another example of encapsulation. He was only following the instruction of the master. How he was able to walk on water was a mystery to him. Only Christ the master knew how. Encapsulation.
Answer:
1) 2 bits 2) shown in explanation 3) shown in explanation 4) 22 bits per pixel (2.75 bytes)
Explanation:
As a bit is one of two states, 1 or 0, 2 bits is sufficient to represent 4 colors:
00 = color 1
01 = color 2,
10 = color 3,
11 = color 4
This would be the custom type of encoding for that specific image as it only uses 4 colors.
Now to calculate the amount of memory saved, which is quite simple:
24-2=22
So you Would save 22 bits per pixel or 2.75 bytes per pixel.
Answer:
I hope this answer is correct
Explanation:
Internal registers include the instruction register (IR), memory buffer register (MBR), memory data register (MDR), and memory address register (MAR). The instruction register fetches instructions from the program counter (PC) and holds each instruction as it is executed by the processor.