The world's best teacher, with the superpower of explaining things clearly.🥰🥰🥰🥰
@ComputerScienceLessonsАй бұрын
You are very kind. Thanks :)KD
@MasonTho10 күн бұрын
really helpful videos, laughed when i recognised some of the characters you put into the comparison.
@ComputerScienceLessons3 күн бұрын
Glad you liked my art work :)KD
@TanginSultana-cs3iyАй бұрын
I have been eagerly waiting for your videos. If possible, could you kindly consider making them a bit sooner?
@ComputerScienceLessonsАй бұрын
I'm afraid the day job gets in the way. :)KD
@orangevanillasodaАй бұрын
One thing I still find confusing is the difference between multicycle and pipeline implementation. I haven't been able to find many videos on multicycle implementation in MIPS for some reason.
@Lilysultana7409Ай бұрын
want more videos about CPU caches
@ComputerScienceLessonsАй бұрын
There's some stuff about the cache levels here kzbin.info/www/bejne/lXqbdH-Hlt-io5I :)KD
@mousquetaire86Ай бұрын
Is this related to "data pipelines" and "CI/CD"?
@ComputerScienceLessonsАй бұрын
Only analogously. The fast food drive through, or a factory assembly line are as much related.
@zvenhamo18 күн бұрын
Please make a tutorial about Networking explaining all those stages 😢😢
@ComputerScienceLessons13 күн бұрын
I have made a series about 'Computer Networks' that may help you. Search my play lists for 'computer networks'
@human4566vvАй бұрын
Assembly has nothing to do with cpu It's an abstraction for perogrammer. Secondly There is always mode bit in the instruction, your CPU by no means knows how to read and understand assembly.
@ComputerScienceLessonsАй бұрын
It's easier to visualise assembly code running, rather than a lot of 1s and 0s. This is pedagogically reasonable given the one to one relationship between assembly code and machine code. A detailed discussion of addressing modes in this video is however not appropriate.
@mousquetaire86Ай бұрын
Is this related to "data pipelines" and "CI/CD"?
@ComputerScienceLessonsАй бұрын
CI/CD is an approach to managing software development. Similar to so called 'agile' or 'extreme programming' :)KD