a. No; True, but that's only part of it.





 

b. No; stored programs came before we had disks.





 

c. Yes; *YES!





 

d. No; in some ways it complicates parallelism.





 

a. No; this IS part of a transistor.





 

b. Yes; *YES!





 

c. No; this IS part of a transistor.





 

d. No; this IS part of a transistor.





 

a. No; this IS an efficiency realized by ICs.





 

b. Yes; This was true prior to ICs.





 

c. No; this IS an efficiency realized by ICs.





 

d. No; this IS an efficiency realized by ICs.





 

a. No; currents can flow through both.





 

b. No; both contain a control wire.





 

c. Yes; *YES!





 

d. No; not true.





 

a. No; you need 2 raised to the number of variables.





 

b. No; you need 2 raised to the number of variables.





 

c. Yes; you need 2 raised to the number of variables.





 

d. No; you need 2 raised to the number of variables.





 

a. No; that wouldn't do much.





 

b. No; the same is true for any circuit.





 

c. No; Close, but just the opposite.





 

d. Yes; *YES!





 

a. No; all information is there at once.





 

b. No; it's in binary, and all information is there at once.





 

c. Yes; binary corresponds to on and off in the transistors, and all information is there at once.





 

d. No; it's in binary.





 

a. No; This is a description of the computer as a whole.





 

b. No; This would be a good trick.





 

c. Yes; *YES!





 

d. No; that's what compilers allow.





 

a. No; this would allow only 4 operations.





 

b. No; this would allow only 8 operations.





 

c. Yes; 2 to the power 4 is indeed 16.





 

d. No; this would allow 32 operations.





 

a. Yes; *YES!





 

b. No; you need more than one latch.





 

c. No; Nope.





 

d. No; Nope.