Random Access Memory (RAM) DDR (184 pins), DDR2 (240 pins), DDR3 (240 pins), and DDR4 (240 pins) are the different types of DIMMs (288 pins). DDR (200 pin), DDR2 (200 pin), DDR3 (204 pin), and DDR4 RAM SODIMMs are examples of RAM SODIMMs (260 pin). The following is an example of a DDR3‐1600 data transmission calculation: 1600 MT/s 8 = 12,800 megabits per second Dual‐channel is a 128‐bit bus with double width. Triple‐channel is a 192‐bit bus with three times the width. Quad‐channel is a 256‐bit bus with four times the width. CL or CAS is a measure of latency. To reduce overheating, a “dual‐rail” PSU separates and controls the current in each wire. Hard drives store data. The included types are as follows: SATA: A serial ATA utilizes a 15‐pin power connector and 7‐pin data connector. Rev 1 (1.5 Gb/s), Rev 2 (3 Gb/s), Rev 3 (6 Gb/s), Rev 3.2 (SATA Express) (16 Gb/s). Redundant Array of Independent Disk (RAID): RAID 0 refers to striping, while RAID 1 refers to mirroring, and RAID 5 refers to striping with parity. In a striped system, RAID 10 refers to mirrored sets. RAID 0 indicates that the system is not fault‐ tolerant. Disk duplexing is achieved by employing RAID 1 with two disk controllers. Networking protocols: FTP (File Transfer Protocol). Port 21 SSH (Secure Shell). Port 22 Telnet Port 23 SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) Port 25 (can use port 587) DNS (Domain Naming System). Port 53 HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol).Port 80 POP3 (Post Office Protocol). Port 110 IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol). Port 143 HTTPS (HTTP Secure). Port 443 SMB (Server Message Block). Port 445, 137–139 AFP (Apple Filing Protocol). Port 548 (or 427) RDP (Remote Desktop Protocol). Port 3389 Cabling standards: Category 3: Rated for 10 Mb/s Category 5: Rated for 100 Mb/s Category 5e: Rated for 100 Mb/s and gigabit networks Category 6/6a: Rated for gigabit and 10 Gb/s networks Category 7: Rated for gigabit and 10 Gb/s networks Plenum‐rated cable: Fire‐resistant cable created for the following: airways, conduits and areas sprinklers cannot reach. Wireless Ethernet versions, including name, data transfer rate, frequency and modulation used: 802.11a, 54 Mb/s, 5 GHz 802.11b, 11 Mb/s, 2.4 GHz 802.11g, 54 Mb/s, 2.4 GHz 802.11n, 300/600 Mb/s, 5 and 2.4 GHz802.11ac, 1.7 Gb/s and beyond, 5 GHz Networking connectors: twisted pair (RJ45, RJ11); fiber optic (SC, ST, and LC); coaxial (F‐connector, BNC). 568B standard: 1. White/orange, 2. Orange, 3. White/green, 4. Blue, 5. White/ blue, 6. Green, 7. White/brown, 8. Brown. IPv4 addresses are 32‐bit dotted‐decimal numbers, such as 192.168.1.1. They can be manually entered or allocated dynamically (DHCP). The following IP classes are available: Class A range: 1–126, subnet mask: 255.0.0.0. Private: 10.x.x.x Class B range: 128–191, subnet mask: 255.255.0.0. Private: 172.16.0.0– 172.31.255.255 Class C range: 192–223, subnet mask: 255.255.255.0. Private: 192.168.x.x Loopback is 127.0.0.1 APIPA is 169.254.x.x (also known as link‐local) Classless Inter‐Domain Routing(CIDR) addresses (example: 10.150.23.58/24) need a prefix. The /24 denotes a 255.255.255.0 subnet mask. IPv6 addresses are 128‐bit hexadecimal numbers, such as 2001:7120:0000:8001: 0000:0000:0000:1F10. ::1 is the loopback address. Unicast The most popular kind of IP address is IPv6, which is allocated to a single interface. 1000 Mb/s (gigabit Ethernet) and 10 Gb/s are common network speeds (10 Gb Ethernet). Custom PCs includes Workstations for audio and video are included. CAD/CAM workstations will require powerful multicore CPUs, high‐end video cards, and maximized RAM; home server PCs (gigabit NICs, RAID arrays, print sharing, file sharing, media streaming); HTPCs (compact form factor, surround sound, HDMI output, TV tuner); gaming PCs (multicore CPU, high‐end video, high‐def sound, high‐end cooling); thin clients (low resources, meets minimum OS requirements, relies on server, diskless, embedded OS, network connectivity); virtualization workstations (low resources, meets minimum OS needs, relies on server, diskless, embedded OS, network communication) (strong CPU and plenty of RAM). Type 1 is the bare or native metal hypervisor. Type 2 is hosted and operates on top of the operating system.