Because without an equality sign it can not be considered to be an equation and therefore has no solution.
Without an equality sign the given terms can't be considered to be an equation
If they are to be multiplied then the solution is 8
r=0 is the solution...
Yes, it is the only solution.
Windows XP supports spanned and striped RAID 0 volumes Hardware RAID is considered a better solution for fault tolerance than software RAID RAID 0 does not provide fault tolerance
RAID 0 does not provide any fault tolerance.
Mirroring is the method it is used. This is commonly in the specifications of RAID1, RAID5, RAID10, RAID1+0, RAID15, and others. RAID is commonly used to designate RAID (Redundant Array of Independant Disks) setups, but RAID is not technically recognized as a specification, and not all RAID types and enumerations (such as 15) are even recognized as valid designations. RAID may also not involve data redundancy or mirroring at all, such as in Striping (RAID0, RAID2, RAID3, RAID1+0, etc.)
RAID 0.
Fault tolerance is the ability of a system to continue working even when a fault exists. In the case of RAID, which stands for Redundant Array of Inexpensive Discs, fault tolerance is provided by having data recorded on more than one drive, and also by having more than one power supply. Note that RAID 0 is not fault telerant because it is simply stripes the data to increase size and bandwidth, but provides no redundancy. RAID 1 and RAID 5 are fault tolerant, to various levels.
Because without an equality sign it can not be considered to be an equation and therefore has no solution.
Every RAID level stripes data across multiple drives, which improves performance compared to using a single disk. RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 1+0, RAID 5, RAID 6, etc. all have better performance than a single disk. Other than RAID 0, all other RAID levels provide fault tolerance. RAID 1, RAID 1+0, RAID 5, RAID 6, etc. all have fault tolerance.
Different RAID systems have different effects on multiple hard drives. RAID 0 combines storage together. Say you have 2 250GB HDDs combined with RAID 0: that you gives you, essentially, 500GB of storage. The problem with RAID 0 is that if one of the drives were to fail, then the other is to fail too, because of the way RAID 0 works by distributing strands of data over both disks. RAID 0 is sometimes not considered to be a true RAID system because of the lack of fault tolerance. RAID 1 and 5 are more complex to describe, but they generally deal with the same thing: backups. Instead of combining storage, RAID 1 and 5 deal with clones of a particular drive to offer redundancy if one were to fail. Say you have 2 250GB HDDs under RAID 1, essentially giving you 250GB of storage. If one drive were to fail, then the other would serve as a replacement if such were to occur.
Data recovery services offers this service. They have offices in many different cities. RAID services is a hardware based data recovery solution when hard drives and motherboards go haywire.
RAID 1, RAID 1 + 0, and RAID 5, 6.
Raid 0 dad recovery is for emergency use on computer services. When data is corrupted or damaged, Raid 0 Data recovery can help by offering speedy recovery of data or files.
raid 0