There is no practical limit to how much storage space or RAM a computer can have. The amount of RAM will be dictated by the number of RAM slots and the chipset being used. Storage space is limited by the capacity of contemporary hard drives; the BIOS is capable of supporting several hundred thousand times the current size of the largest commercially available hard drive.
For memory, "megabyte" is usually misused to mean 1024×1024 bytes = 1,048,576 bytes. Technically, this is a "megabinary byte", written MiB.
A gigabyte (GB) is a greater unit of measure than a megabyte (MB). Therefore, a megabyte cannot hold any gigabytes at all. However, a gigabyte can hold many megabytes (1024 MB to be exact).
1 MB can hold:
1000 Kilobytes or 1,000,000 Bytes
A megabyte is 220 or 1048576 memory locations.
1048576 bytes.1 Kilobyte(KB)=1024 bytes and 1 Megabyte(MB)=1024 kilobytes.So 1MB=1024x1024 bytes.
i know the answer but i wont tell you
1,048,576 bytes
512 MB of photo space.
2,575 MB
100 MB.
750 megabytes
Approximately 4.4 MB (megabytes).
Around 42 Megabytes (MB)
Not that much space. Realistic texture packs go around from 5 mb to 10 mb, and other non- realistic ones go from about 1 mb to 4 mb.
It depends on how much space you have
199998.31 bytes or 1.9999831 megabytes
Just over 500 mb 514 mb really.
Installing iWork 09 will take up 658 megabytes of hard disc space.
About 150 Kb, or about 1 / 6 of a megabyte.