That depends a lot on how you use your cell phone. Watching a movie will use a lot of MB per minute; listening to music or watching photographs less, and checking websites, or text messages (in WhatsApp, for example), even less. Even for one and the same activity, such as watching photographs, the number of MB can vary a lot, depending on the quality of the photo.In summary, there is no simple conversion factor that lets you convert from MB to minutes.
Yes, the majority of cell phones today are created with the intended purpose of using data. However, a large market of cell phones that are not smartphones still exists.
The Cell - A Molecular Approach (by G. M. Cooper and R. E. Hausman) states the exact data to be 4.6 Mb (Mega base pairs) that means 4.6 * 106 bp
The metric unit to record data are bytes. There are 1024 bytes in a kilobyte, 1024 kilobytes in a megabyte, etc.
In the age of smart phones, many people use their phones to store a variety of important information and data from client phone numbers to family photos. Some companies that can provide cellphone data recovery are Kesseler International and WeRecoverData.
It's not.-- The E1 line rate is 2.048 Mb/s.-- The data rate of 63 E1s, simply time multiplexed, would be 63 x 2.048 = 129.024 Mb/s-- 64 E1s may be multiplexed into a single E4 stream, at a rate of 139.264 Mb/s.-- The STM1 data rate is 155.52 Mb/s. Any combination of data streams totalingroughly that rate, including as many as perhaps 75 E1s, could be packaged fortransport on an STM1 facility.
probably means that the phone can store 1 megabyte of data... which is kinda small
An antonym is the opposite and a megabyte is a unit of measure. There is no opposite.A megabyte is a size of data on a computer. Opposites could be other sizes of data like kilobyte, gigabyte, and terabyte.
MB is used to measure the volume of computer data. GHz is used in the measurement wavelength.
There is no equivalence. A megabyte is a measure of data while a minute is a measure of time. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
One megabyte (MB) is made up of 1,024 kilobytes (KB). The next measurement up is a gigabyte (GB), which is made up of 1024MB. The most popular plans offered by mobile phone companies are 1GB, 2GB or 5GB of mobile data allowance. But deals can start as low as 100MB depending on your needs
it is measured in mb response time is measured in nanoseconds
what is considered data uage on cell phones
No, baud was used to measure the transfer rate of a data connection (this was a rate of bits per second). Data rates are now stated in Mb/s, or Kb/s or even Gb/s.
100mg is a measure of mass. Not data. You probably mean 100 mb. It's abou the size of 20 mp3s or about how much data you'd waste streaming a 45 minute video on youtube.
A mb is a measure of volume data storage. A second is a measure of time. It could be a fraction of an angle but that is unlikely in this context). An mb and second measure different things and, according to the basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid. 1 mb will hold a much longer time's worth of low quality audio than it will a high quality video.
mobile phones
There can be no equivalence. A mb is a measure of optoelectronic data storage. Different media and quality require different storage requirements.