When I bought my laptop last summer, I spent months researching what I would need to replace the aging, decrepit lap-sized paperweight I was currently using. I was not, however, very well versed in the technical specifics of computers, nor did I really know off hand what I needed. Thankfully, however, my boyfriend is an expert in his own right, and was in the process of buying the components to build his own desktop computer at the same time. With his guidance, I was able to pin down that I needed a lot of storage, a high-quality video card, as fast of a processor as I could afford and a nearly excessive amount of removable media options. So, with the information he provided (and repeated many times at my prompting to make sure I understood everything), I did endless hours of research, online browsing and in-store playing and finally plunked down some serious change to get the machine I work with today (and hopefully for many years to come). The experience was a bit frustrating, since I was not used to the onslaught of numbers and abbreviations he threw at me (such as Ghz which is the speed of my processor and the heartbeat of my computer), but was ultimately very rewarding. In fact, the whole computer-buying adventure was far more to my benefit than I had previously expected, because when it came to this week's reading, I was rarely, if ever, stopped in confusion at the terms and definitions presented to me. CPUs, you say? Got it! That's my oh-so-speedy processor that manages my computer's operations. The difference between Solid State Drives and Optical Discs? No problem! SSD's are the way in which my computers stores all of its precious information using 500 GB of flash memory, while optical discs require a physical disc to keep it's information. Data representation in the form of ASCII? I may not be fluent, but it is more than gibberish to me now!