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 data in RAM stays there only as long as  your computer is running. When you turn the computer off, RAM loses its data.  When you turn your computer on again, your operating system and other files  are once again loaded into RAM, usually from your hard disk.
 RAM can be compared to a person's short-term memory and the hard disk to the long-term memory. The  short-term memory focuses on work at hand, but can only keep so many facts in view  at one time. If short-term memory fills up, your brain sometimes is able to  refresh it from facts stored in long-term memory. A computer also works this way.  If RAM fills up, the processor needs to continually go to the hard disk to  overlay old data in RAM with new, slowing down the computer's operation. Unlike the  hard disk which can become completely full of data so that it won't accept  any more, RAM never runs out of memory. It keeps operating, but much more slowly  than you may want it to.
 How Big is RAM?
 RAM is small, both in physical size (it's stored in microchips) and in the amount of data it can hold. It's much smaller than your hard disk. A typical computer may come  with 256 million bytes of RAM and a hard disk that can hold 40 billion bytes.  RAM comes in the form of "discrete" (meaning separate) microchips and also  in the form of modules that plug into holes in the computer's motherboard. These holes connect through a bus or set of  electrical paths to the processor. The hard drive, on the other hand, stores data on a magnetized surface that looks like a phonograph record.
 Most personal computers are designed  to allow you to add additional RAM modules up to a certain limit. Having  more RAM in your computer reduces the number of times that the computer processor  has to read data in from your hard disk, an operation that takes much longer than reading data from RAM. (RAM access time is in nanoseconds; hard  disk access time is in milliseconds.)
 Why Random Access?
 RAM is called "random access" because any storage location can be accessed directly. Originally, the  term distinguished regular core memory from offline memory, usually on  magnetic tape in which an item of data could only be accessed by starting from the  beginning of the tape and finding an address sequentially. Perhaps it should have  been called "nonsequential memory" because RAM access is hardly random. RAM is organized and controlled in a way that enables data to be stored  and retrieved directly to specific locations. Note that other forms of  storage such as the hard disk and CD-ROM are also accessed directly (or "randomly") but the term random access is not applied to these forms of storage.
 In addition to disk, floppy disk,  and CD-ROM storage, another important form of storage is read-only memory  (ROM), a more expensive kind of memory that retains data even when the computer  is turned off. Every computer comes with a small amount of ROM that holds  just enough programming so that the operating system can be loaded into RAM  each time the computer is turned on.


 
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