Please ellaborate. Which cache are you looking for? Modern computers can have over a dozen different caches L1 and L2 CPU Caches Harddrives Caches Browser Caches DLL Caches DNS Caches etc.
1.fast data processing 2.fast data retrieval
not all caches need a replacement policy.
The type of geocaches that are not able to hold a trackable are webcam caches, virtual caches and earth caches. This is because there is not an actual cache at the coordinates. You may also find physical caches that are not big enough for trackables, such as micro caches which are tiny, fingertip sized cylinders with nothing but a small paper log.
You unlock caches graually as you find the audio logs throughout the city, 3 types of caches: mongeese, snipers, and rockets
In cases where the user (or system) knows exactly what data is going to be needed. Caches are algorithm-based, while a RAM disk is user-directed.
"où est-ce que tu te caches ?" or "où te caches-tu ?" are French translations for "where are you hiding?"
registry
Cache coherence is a property of two or more caches mirroring the same shared resource. If all caches agree about the cached content, the caches are coherent. If (at least) one cache is changed the caches are incoherent until the changes are propagated to the other caches.Multiprocessing systems are the context where one will most likley come across the concept of cache coherence. In a shared memory multiprocessor, each processor has its own memory cache, so any change must be mirrored by all other caches, so that all processors see the same memory content. Should a processor happen to use an outdated value, the results are unpredictable. Or, if you like it better, the results are very predictably garbage.
they have claw like tips that caches its pray or what ever it needs to survive out in the ponds
by leaping from basically rock to rock and caches bugs with its mouth
Most modern (post-2000) CPUs used shared multi-level caches. The level of sharing a specific cache can vary by the design of the processor. For example, many CPUs will share Level 1, Level 2, and Level 3 caches between all cores. In others (particularly those with many cores), Level 1 and possibly Level 2 caches may be shared only between a certain subset of cores. For example, in certain 16-core CPUs, the design breaks it into 8 sets of 2 cores - each pair shares a L1 cache (8 L1 caches total), with 2 pairs sharing a L2 cache (4 L2 caches total), and all cores sharing a single L3 cache.