Not even close. The entire internet is only around 500 exabytes in total, and after exabytes there are zettabytes. If you want a yottabyte, you will have to wait around 20 years.
A brontobyte. Note - this isn't yet an official name, but is recognised by many.
A Yottabyte, although there is no computer that has achieved this storage yet including all the world's hard-drive storage combined. Kilobyte Megabyte Gigabyte Terabyte Petabyte Exabyte Zettabyte Yottabyte
It is not yet possible to have unlimited hard drive space on a PC.Hard drive space is finite; like most things in life.
not yet, son
You can rely on Mac system CD or a Mac Eraser to freely yet securely erase a Mac hard drive. See resources link.
An SAS hard drive has many high performance advantages over a SATA drive. The main thing that makes it better is the speed. A typical SATA drive operates at 7200 RPM, yet a typical SAS drive operates at 10,000 or 15,000 RPM.
1000 petabytes = 1 exabyte (1018)1000 exabytes = 1 zettabyte (1021)1000 zettabyte = 1 yottabyte (1024)
If your hard drive crashes, you lose your itunes movie library. There are two types of hard drives, those that have crashed and those that have not yet crashed. A number of places sell external backup drives.
A vacuole holds food and waste that isn't immediately needed by the cell. I would compare it to the hard drive or the recycle bin. The hard drive stores files that aren't needed immediately by the computer and the recycle bin is a division of the hard drive that holds waste you aren't ready to get rid of yet.
Hard drives are designed to be removed. No. I can not remove a hard drive, but anyone who regularly works on computers can. They simply unscrew and snap out the old one and snap in the new one. They should be backed up regularly. There are two types of hard drives: those that have crashed and those that have not yet crashed. The data from the backup is then put on the new hard drive. If you do not back up your data, it is either lost or extremely expensive to recover.
Because we don't need that much RAM or hard drive space yet. 1.2 septillion is a lot!
The hard drive is what stores all your data. It houses the hard disk, where all your files and folders are physically located. A typical hard drive is only slightly larger than your hand, yet can hold over 100 GB of data. The data is stored on a stack of disks that are mounted inside a solid encasement. These disks spin extremely fast (typically at either 5400 or 7200 RPM) so that data can be accessed immediately from anywhere on the drive. The data is stored on the hard drive magnetically, so it stays on the drive even after the power supply is turned off. The term "hard drive" is actually short for "hard disk drive." The term "hard disk" refers to the actual disks inside the drive. However, all three of these terms are usually seen as referring to the same thing -- the place where your data is stored. Since I use the term "hard drive" most often, that is the correct one to use