Social Sciences, asked by yashgaur9, 1 year ago

7.How is UAF not granted in Fiji?

Answers

Answered by habibzoya
1
The BIOS will soon be dead: Intel has announced plans to completely replace it with UEFI on all their chipsets by 2020. But what is UEFI, and how is it different from the BIOS we’re all familiar with?

Both UEFI and BIOS are low-level software that starts when you boot your PC before booting your operating system, but UEFI is a more modern solution, supporting larger hard drives, faster boot times, more security features, and—conveniently—graphics and mouse cursors.

We’ve seen newer PCs that ship with UEFI still refer to it as the “BIOS” to avoid confusing people who are used to a traditional PC BIOS. Even if your PC uses the term “BIOS”, modern PCs you buy today almost certainly ship with UEFI firmware instead of a BIOS. Here’s why.

What Is a BIOS?


RELATED: What Does a PC’s BIOS Do, and When Should I Use It?

BIOS is short for Basic Input-Output system. It’s low-level software that resides in a chip on your computer’s motherboard. The BIOS loads when your computer starts up, and the BIOS is responsible for waking up your computer’s hardware components, ensures they’re functioning properly, and then runs the bootloader that boots Windows or whatever other operating system you have installed.

You can configure various settings in the BIOS setup screen. Settings like your computer’s hardware configuration, system time, and boot order are located here. You can access this screen by pressing a specific key—different on different computers, but often Esc, F2, F10, or Delete—while the computer boots. When you save a setting, it’s saved to the memory on your motherboard itself. When you boot your computer, the BIOS will configure your PC with the saved settings
Answered by dackpower
0

Universal Adult Franchise was not granted to Fiji because of the electoral system. As the population of inhabitants was comparatively much lower than the indigenous Fijians who was much higher in population. The method of election continued a prosperous elite for Indians and inherent Fijians remained to be represented by appointees of the Great Council of Chiefs and did not vote straight for their own diplomats.

From the 1960s onwards, the Indo-Fijian controlled National Federation Party and started fighting for the universal franchise on a general vote list. Managers of the domestic Fijian population opposed to this recommendation,  due to afraid that this would give sufficient administrative authority to Indo-Fijians.

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