1kb =1,024 bytes
1Byte= bits
So that Mean 1 Byte is less Then 1 Kilobyte
1K = 1024 bytes. (Computer) 1K = 1000 With that being said, when someone is talking to you in the context of computers and they say "the file is 1K in size" they are referring to 1024 bytes When someone is talking to you in weight, or perhaps some other metric unit they are referring to 1000. For example: 1000m = 1Km 1000g = 1Kg so, to answer your question --> generally speaking 1K is smaller than 1Kb
There is no such thing as a milabyte. There's a byte & then smaller is a bit
A byte is smaller than a megabyte.1 bit = one "on" or "off" in a binary computer or storage medium.1 byte = 8 bits.1 kilabyte = 1,000 bytes, or 8,000 bits.1 megabyte = 1,000,000 bytes.
1 byte = 8 bits 1 bit = 1024 cenibits 1 cenibit =1024 milbits
if u bit a dik it past if u byte a dik its present tense.
No A bit is smaller than a byte There are 8 bits in a byte, so a megabyte (MB) is 8 times larger than a megabit (Mb)
1K
1000
See the related link. According to that info, you could say about 2048 bytes RAM (it had 1K of 16 bit words, but a byte is 8 bits). And 12K ROM.
1m means one megabyte, which is 1,024 kilobytes. 1k means one kilobyte, which is 1,024 bytes. The latter is much smaller, and practically useless for storing many forms of digital data on average for users.
'1K' is an abbreviation for 1000 (one thousand). It could be 1000 of anything.
We would have to say that there's no such thing as a nanobyte. A "byte" is defined as a word or number composed of 8 bits. A "bit" is defined as the quantum of information, that is, the smallest possible unit of it, which can't be divided down into anything smaller. So we'd have to say that the smallest possible fraction of a byte is 1/8th of it. Once you cut up a byte into 8 pieces, you can't cut them any smaller. So there's certainly no such thing as a billionth of a byte. (That's what 'nano' means.)