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Everything in digital circuits are sync-ed to a clock that is constant.
If a bit doesn't settle to the proper value by the time of the clock pulse as expected then the whole shee-bang will fail and the clock must be slowed all the time. So due to the constant clock and do or die nature of digital circuits, it is impossible for a particular bit pattern to be processed faster than another. Current draw will fluctuate some however.
Microprocessors are all built on a sheet like cookies and the ones that can't reliably truck bits around inside with a desired clock rate are stamped as slower so they can reliably process data.
Hence the different speed grades of Pentiums for example. They don't set out to make slower ones the yield just dictates this.
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What do you mean by "processed faster"? You are presenting numbers and not state transitions I assume. Operations on numbers are determined by processor clock speeds which are set to allow for the latency in transitions. Thus a value is set an operation is performed. These happen in fixed intervals. The CPU doesn't care what the number is - the speed of processing is the same.
Peter Wasser
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts." - Bertrand Russell
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No, it's not processed faster. If you're talking about a serial stream, the sample is taken at some point in the middle of the defined "bit" time. The rising and falling edges are not instantaneous due, I believe, to natural capacitance of the circuit and other factors. You can't just gate something on or off instantaneously.
Keep in mind that everything in a computer is synchronized to a clock cycle or some multiple of a clock cycle (though modern CPU's have several different clocks doing things) the point is, any bits, whether processed in serial, sampled at a particular frequency, or determined by rising/falling edges, or processed in parallel as is the case with a memory or instruction bus, everything marches to the beat of the same drummer, so just because you have non-instantaneous rising/falling edges, this doesn't affect the processing speed.
Marc
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Rise and fall times for most technologies are nearly equal, so no, it doesn't affect the 'processing' time. As Marc mentioned, the device doing the processing is clocked at a rate consistent with the technology, and individual bits are sampled after an appropriate settling time, nearer the middle of the bit time than the transition. What is significantly affected by transition time is the power consumption of the device. Power is defined as the product of the voltage across and the current through a path. For semiconductor devices, a one is defined as a high voltage with little or no current, while a zero is a relatively high current with little or no voltage; both states consume little power. But the time spent between states can consume large amounts of power because the voltage and current are both non-zero. The quicker we move from one state to the other, the less power is consumed, and the less heat we have to get rid of.
Will Rogers never met me.
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Apart from what the other responses mention, the processor doesn't read bits serially, it reads them over a bus, so 11110000 would be processed at the same speed as 10101010
Would 11111111 be processed at the same speed as 00000000 would be a better question!
PooperPig - Coming Soon
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The properties of circuits that affect changing voltages and currents are capacitance and inductance. Transistors are a switch that are controlled by the voltage on the gate, depending on the type of transistor. As I understand it, it is the capacitance on that gate that determines the switching speed of the transistor and the overall clock speed that can be used for the chip.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transistor[^]
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11010110 00110010 000111010 11101000
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Juts a thought. Not a very nice one, but effective.
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It's transferred by bodily fluids, so perhaps blending them up first and spraying them with the mist?
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I think hitting the deck from 20000 ft is going to blend them up pretty well.
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Yeah, I had considered that, but it relies on random splatter patterns...
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its no different to warfare in the middle/dark ages
'g'
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That's a darn good idea.
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We could drop a few hundred neutron bombs all over Africa, it would be faster and thorougher! And just as discriminatory!
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Africa, I thought we were working on IS not Africa, man you a glutton for punishment!
So why not neutron bomb both the middle east and Africa, and while you are at it reduce the world population and nuke India and China. Oh and I hate paedophiles so nuke any country with lots of them, include the Catholic church in that lot.
Just to be fair randomly drop a few hundred across any location not included in the above.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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Well said, my thoughts exactly!
Let's not forget to bomb those damn commies too (Puttin & pal), South America (let's not forget where the drug comes from!) and.... I think I forgot somewhere....
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Super Lloyd wrote: I think I forgot somewhere
Australia?
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Nelek wrote: Australia?
Nah the random drops, paedo and catholic drops will get Oz.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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No thanks... we're good!!
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Funnily enough I don't have a problem with Russia nor the drug lords.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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Indeed, that is ... suspicious ...
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What as Africa got to do with ISIS?
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Well first I want to say, as it might not have been obvious, that it was a sarcastic post!
And then, to answer your question, for some reason my geography is confused and I always place the middle east in Africa, though people from there told me it is not so! But hey, arguably it's just next to it with no obvious demarcation that I can see!
To add to the confusion, don't we say that Africa is the cradle of humankind?
And don't we say that Irak is in the location of what was known as Summer, one of the most ancient human civilization with writing?
You can see why I am confused now, I am sure...
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My kid sister wouldn't like that
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Despite the alias a sane response - a lonely one.
Peter Wasser
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts." - Bertrand Russell
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