Mac is definitely better than Windows. Depending on the size. All Mac's can, most PC,s can't.
It will hold about 80 gb
A GB refers to storage space on a disk drive. 100 GB could hold an entire library floor of academic journals. 100 kilobytes would be one page of a book. 64 GB is equal to 65,536 kilobytes.
Yes, a PC can have 100 GB of RAM. 100 GB of RAM can make a PC very fast. However, this can be very expensive. Anyways, only special computers like supercomputers which have the capability to hold 100 GB can have that much RAM. It is mainly for governmental and highly important use. In a few places, if you request 100 GB of RAM, you have to give an important reason for that request. For a normal computer, 1 GB to 24 GB are highly recommended.
Gigabytes a unit of measure for computer memory. 450 Gigabytes can simply hold more things such as music, programs, emails, and pictures than 4 gigabytes.
Asuming you mean Megabytes, or Mbps, then no. There is ruffly 1000 mbps in 1 Gb. So a 100 Gb drive can hold 100000 Mbps. The average computer in 2011 has a 250 to 500 GB hard drive.
There is no limit except for the storage capacity of your computer. In one gigabyte (GB) you can hold well over one hundred million icons, which is only about a hundreth of the capacity it likely has.
the conversion that is correct to a computer hard drive that can hold 250000000000 bites is 250 GB
That the computer is able to hold 640 gigabytes of information
If you are planning on storing nothing but text files (essays) on your computer, a gigabyte would last you, for all practical purposes, forever. But if you ever plan to have pictures or movies on your computer, you're going to need a lot more.
I think either 100 or 150 because i have an mp3 player with 1.89 gb and it holed about 150 songs. Some mp3 players/ipods hold less or more.
the HDD stores all of the information for the computer
Zip disks can hold 100 megabytes. Today's hard drives usually hold 250 gigabytes, smaller ones are around 100 gigabytes, and large ones are upwards of 500 gigabytes. One gigabyte is 1000 megabytes, so the typical hard drive can hold 2,500 times more than a zip disk. To answer the question in one word, no.