In Feburary 2016 19,
Log into WHM. You will need your username and password.
Click the Create a New Account link from the Account Functions menu.
Enter the domain name into the Domain field, and the username into the UserName field. The UserName field will initially default to a name based on the domain you enter, but you may change it if you wish.
Enter a password into the Password field, and the disk quota into the Quota field. The Quota field, measured in MegaBytes, controls how much hard-disk space the new account is allotted.
Decide whether to allow CGI access, Shell access and FrontPage extensions, then check the respective boxes accordingly.
Decide on limits for the following boxes and enter values for each in the text field for each: Max FTP Accounts, Max Email Accounts, Max Email Lists, Max SQL Databases and Max Sub Domains.
Enter the maximum bandwidth for the account (in MegaBytes) into the Bandwidth Limit field.
Click 'Create.'
In Feburary 2016 19,
Showing posts with label measured. Show all posts
Showing posts with label measured. Show all posts
Friday, 19 February 2016
Tuesday, 16 February 2016
How to Calculate Memory Transfer RateIn Feburary 2016 16,
In Feburary 2016 16,
Determine the bus clock rate. This information should be labeled on the memory's packaging. The bus clock rate is measured in MHz. For example, the memory might operate at 300 MHz.
Multiply the bus clock rate by 1, 2 or 3 depending on how many streams of information are flowing at once. DDR2 RAM, for example, has a multiplication factor of 2, and DDR3 RAM has a factor of 3.
Multiply the result from the previous step by 64, which is the number of bits transferred.
Divide the result from the previous step by 8 to get the transfer rate in bytes instead of bits, as there are 8 bits in a byte. You now know the memory transfer rate in both bits and bytes.
In Feburary 2016 16,
Determine the bus clock rate. This information should be labeled on the memory's packaging. The bus clock rate is measured in MHz. For example, the memory might operate at 300 MHz.
Multiply the bus clock rate by 1, 2 or 3 depending on how many streams of information are flowing at once. DDR2 RAM, for example, has a multiplication factor of 2, and DDR3 RAM has a factor of 3.
Multiply the result from the previous step by 64, which is the number of bits transferred.
Divide the result from the previous step by 8 to get the transfer rate in bytes instead of bits, as there are 8 bits in a byte. You now know the memory transfer rate in both bits and bytes.
In Feburary 2016 16,
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