>>10Irrelevant. That's not a ROM chip. To answer
>>1-chan's question, we need to know what the electromagnetic field of all the data on the chip weighs. This is a simple calculation, just determine the capacity of the chip, find the strength of the gravitational field of zeros and that of ones, then determine the mass from that calculation. But it is complicated because we lack a few key bits:
Does
>>1 want the inertial mass or the relative mass?
How fast is the chip moving?
When manufactured, was the chip left with random data on it, or was it blanked before writing?
How much voltage is needed to induce a component to store data?
What is the information density of the firmware?
But the question of whether it weighs more is simple: it does. However, you are unlikely to be able to construct and instrument sensitive enough to detect that change on Earth, or anywhere within hundreds of millions of lightyears of any gravitational body.