The letter S uses 1 byte of memory, as do all the other ASCII characters.
Well actually the US doesn't take up minutes but there are 1440 minutes in a day.
3 lines on the letter F because top line, and line below that and the one going up and down
You can take up to 12 aspirin in a 24 hour period.
5040 is the answer... first you count up all the numbers then you find out that there is 10 letter. next you take 10*9*8*7 to get 5040. simple as that! >:)
11,574,074.1 days.
Depending on the movie length, a 1 hour movie will take up to 100,000 bytes to be produced and a 2 hour movie will take around 300,000 bytes.
Roblox takes up: 1.5 Giga Bytes, which is the same as 1000 mega bytes
ASCII = 7 bit Unicode = 16 bits UTF-8 =8 bit
Those MMORPG games take up at least 1000-6000 bytes, I've learned the hard way. To play a normal go in store game buying, they only buff that up to 200-500 more bytes because of the custom games that people design.
one kilobyte =1024 bytes =210 bytesone megabyte =1024 kilobytes =220 bytesone GB =1024 MB =230 bytes
if you have too many bytes and have NO idea what to do, if you have any skill with doing so, you could try and decrease the size of the image to free up those 24 extra bytes that it uses.
A Music CD can hold up to 700Mbs, which equals to 700,000,000 bytes, aprox.
hotdogs thousand
20971520 Bytes are in 20 MB.
That depends what encoding is used. One common (fairly old) encoding is ASCII; that one uses one byte for each character (letter, symbol, space, etc.). Some systems use 2 bytes per character. Many modern systems use Unicode; if the Unicode characters are stored as UTF-16 - a fairly common encoding scheme - many common characters will still use a single byte, while many special symbols (for example, accented characters) will take up two bytes. The number of bits is simply the number of bytes multiplied by 8.
Computers are made up of many hardware items. Random Access Memory (RAM) is one of those components. A byte is a unit of measure for memory. Kilobytes (KB) are thousands of bytes. Megabytes (MB) are millions of bytes. Gigabytes (GB) are billions of bytes.
One tera byte is 1,099,511,627,776 (240) bytes, in traditional computer memory terms, or 1,000,000,000,000 (1012) bytes, in computer communications terms. Usage is sometimes confusing, because not everyone uses the same nomenclature.