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Dualchannel

Dualchannel is a term used in technology to describe systems that operate with two parallel channels for data or signals, allowing two separate paths for information or audio to be processed concurrently. The phrase is encountered most often in computing and audio contexts, where it denotes a paired or two-channel arrangement that can enhance performance or stereo reproduction.

Dual-channel memory, found in many personal computers, uses two memory channels controlled by the system memory

In audio, dual-channel refers to stereo sound: two independent channels, left and right, that convey spatial

See also: memory bandwidth, stereo, multi-channel.

controller.
By
installing
two
matched
memory
modules
in
appropriate
slots,
systems
can
achieve
higher
theoretical
memory
bandwidth
than
single-channel
configurations,
which
can
improve
performance
in
memory-intensive
tasks.
Real-world
gains
depend
on
the
workload
and
platform;
some
tasks
show
noticeable
improvements,
others
little.
If
only
one
module
is
present
or
if
modules
are
mismatched,
the
system
may
operate
in
single-channel
mode.
information
and
create
a
sense
of
width
and
depth.
This
is
standard
for
most
consumer
media
and
devices.
The
term
is
sometimes
contrasted
with
mono
(one
channel)
and
with
multi-channel
formats
(such
as
5.1
or
7.1),
which
expand
beyond
two
channels.