The same basic system was used in the next three games, Final Fantasy IV, Final Fantasy V , and Final Fantasy VI, for the Super Famicom (known internationally as the Super Nintendo Entertainment System). These games utilized updated graphics and effects, as well as higher quality music and sound than in previous games, but were otherwise similar to their predeccessors in basic design.
First through third generations of iPod used two ARM7TDMI-derived CPUs running at 90 MHz, while later models had variable speed chips with a peak of 80 MHz to save battery life. iPod uses ultra-thin 1.8 in (46 mm) ATA hard drives (with a non-standard connector) made by Toshiba, or in the case of iPod mini, one-inch Compact Flash hard drives made by Hitachi. iPod has a 32 MB flash ROM chip which contains a bootloader, a program that tells the device to load the operating system from another medium (in this case the hard drive). All iPods have 32 MB of RAM into which the iPod OS (a.k.a. firmware) loads at boot time, and which also caches music. For example, an iPod could spin the hard disc up once, and copy about 30 MB worth of upcoming songs on a playlist into RAM, thus saving power by not having the drive spin up for each song.
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