The limits placed on internet usage by some ISPs relates to the amount of material you are downloading rather than a specific time limit. The time it would take to use a 2 Gigabyte limit would depend upon what you were doing. If you are just checking email and browsing the occasional web site then a 2 Gigabyte limit may be sufficient. If you are viewing video, listening to music; or buying and downloading movies, music, software etc. then you can use 2 Gigabytes in a day or two - a single movie from iTunes, for example, can be around 2 Gigabytes in size.
28 years
It is about 7 full streaming movies for 4GB.
Hours and Gigabytes are not the same thing and cannot be measured together. Hours represent time that has passed by. Gigabytes represent amount of space available on a computer.
107833 Kb = 0.1 Gb. You haven't used over your 3 GB limit, you are not even close. 1024 Kb = 1 Mb 1024 Mb = 1 Gb That's is how you figure out how much you're at.
dumeter is a utility to make life easier in Internet usage only for those people who have limited Internet browsing packages in this case dumeter keeps in account how many MB/s or GB you have used to keep you in your using limit!
That is a HUGE file. Many hours 30 hours + ?
That varies greatly depending on the size of the webpages. If one hour was 15MB of data, you'd get around 60 hours surfing the web.
30 hours or video...
10hours
Gigabytes has no connection with time.
Gigabytes (GB) is not in any way related to time.
The Internet is hugeThe internet is huge. There are many many websites. As much as you can imagine. Over 1,000,000. In May 2009, the Internet is estimated to contain about five hundred BILLION gigabytes of data. That's about 162 exabytes 163,840,000,000,000,000,000 byes.