Imagine you're helping to set the table for a big family dinner, and there are a lot of plates to put out, like 100 plates! If just you do it one by one, it’ll take forever. But if your brother, sister, and parents all help too, putting plates out at the same time, you’ll finish in no time.
This is parallelism in action, when a group of people (or computers) work together to get things done faster.
Why We Need Parallelism
Sometimes, tasks are simple but many. Like when you're coloring 100 pictures, if you color one at a time, it takes ages. But if you and your friends each color a few at the same time, it gets done much quicker!
This is how parallel computing works: instead of doing one thing after another (like a line of people waiting to get their plates), many things happen all at once, like a whole team working together on different parts of the same big job.
It's not magic, just smart teamwork!
Examples
- A baker making multiple cakes at the same time instead of one by one
- A traffic light allowing all directions to move at once instead of taking turns
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See also
- How Does Every Computer Component Explained in 3 Minutes Work?
- How Does Casually Explained: Engineering Work?
- How Does Every Storage Device Explained in 8 Minutes Work?
- How Does Great Leaders INSPIRE Others To Do Great Things Work?
- How Does Everything You NEED to KNOW About Web Applications Work?