If a memory location stores one byte, then a kilobyte is made up of 1,000 locations.
one billion
1024 Bytes = 1 Kilobyte 1024 Kilobytes = 1 Megabyte 1 Megabyte = 10242 Bytes= 1,048,576 Bytes
The answer to this question depends on two key factors, the definition of a kilobyte, and that of a memory location:First, is kilobyte meant in the standard engineering meaning of a multiplier of one thousand, or is it mean to represent a factor of 210, commonly known as a kilobyte, but more correctly called a kibibyte?Thus, one kilobyte can mean 1000 bytes, or 1024 bytes.Second, what is a memory location? Most memory types have a bitwise organization, so 1000 or 1028 bytes would refer to 8000 or 8196 bits, respectively, and refer to 8000 or 8196 memory locations thus.Other implementations of memories may implement a different granularity, for example based on 16, 24, 32 or even larger number of bits per location.
1 Kilobyte
In standard binary usage for memory a KB is 1024 bytes. In standard decimal usage for disk drives a KB is 1000 bytes. Confused yet?
2^16 locations or 65,536 bytes
There are officially 1000 bytes in a kilobyte, while memory manufacturers will use 1024 bytes in a kilobyte (also called a "kilobinary byte"). None. There are 1,000 bytes in a kilobyte. 1024 bytes
Registers represent the number of memory locations. A 2K memory chip has 2x1024=2048 memory locations. Hence there are 2048 registers in a 2K memory.
A 14 bit address can specify 214 or 16,384 different locations.
there are 50000 gigabytes in a kilobyte
A kilobyte (or a k) is 1024 bytes, so 16k is 16*1024 bytes or 16384 bytes.
1 KiloByte = 1 KB