Cache in a sentence as a noun

Of course, larger caches means that more gets cached.

Or at least, a very extensive cache of page fragments.

And in doing so, those files make their way into the cache and the Inactive Memory gets properly evicted.

And there are ways to restructure the cache implementation to avoid the painful latency on cache misses.

Based on prior knowledge of this machine, I'm issuing one prefetch 512B ahead per 128B double-cacheline.

There are some articles, like "Barack Obama", that would take minutes to re-render if the caches were empty.

While cache misses are indeed a large percent of resource requests, it is misguided to analyze the cost of cache misses in isolation.

This left CL with only one practical choice, which it took: remove its data from the Google cache or at least set it up so that third parties could not use such data.

3Tap contended that it could lawfully use the cached data without violating CL's terms of use or any copyright held by CL in any such data.

Cache in a sentence as a verb

Zeroing an SSD is a costly behavior that, if not detected by the firmware, will harm the longevity of the SSD by dirtying its internal pages and its page cache.

I know, because we've done a ton of sophisticated benchmarking comparing custom use case cache performance to general purpose page cache performance.

Sun famously didn't include ECC in their L2 cache, which resulted in transient failures for a number of customers, and they made customers sign an NDA before replacing their parts.

And it has unlimited storage for App backups, iTunes store music, and iBooks, and a 5GB limit for documents, e-mail, and "other stuff", and a 30-day cache of all of the photos I've taken.

If you really know what you're doing, a custom cache can be significantly more efficient than the general purpose kernel cache, which in turn can make significant impact on performance bottom line.

That is our experiment file, designed to examine a theoretical "infinite" cache's performance for data gathering purposes.

It also sued 3Tap for having set up a business that used CL data from the Google cache and offered it to third parties to enable them to have access to CL data without having to get it from the site directly.

This is particularly nice in combination with Chrome's omnibar where you just have to prepend "cache:" before the current URL, hit return, and it will automatically show the cached version of the page you are viewing.

That sort of license represents a bonehead decision from almost any angle one looks at it except one, and that is the legal angle of giving CL a strong position to claim that 3Tap can no longer use any of the data taken from the Google cache, whether or not 3Tap was deemed to have been bound by the CL terms of use.

Cache definitions

noun

a hidden storage space (for money or provisions or weapons)

noun

a secret store of valuables or money

See also: hoard stash

noun

(computer science) RAM memory that is set aside as a specialized buffer storage that is continually updated; used to optimize data transfers between system elements with different characteristics

verb

save up as for future use

See also: hoard stash