1 byte = 8 bits
1 kilobyte (kB) = 1024 bytes
1 megabyte (mB) = 1024 kB
1 gigabyte (gB) = 1024 mB
Basically, the 1024 comes from computers using the binary system
1 GB of RAM is 1024 MB.
1 gb = 1024 mb
1 GB is 1000 MB
1gb is the same as 1024mb.
There are 1024 MB in a gigabyte.
512 MB = 0.5 GBHence after adding 1 GB RAM your laptop memory will be 1.5 GB.
3000, or, more precisely, 3072 MB (since 1 GB is 1024 MB).
960 megabytes in gigabytes is 0.96 gigabytes as 1000mb = 1gb
RAM: 1,073,741,824 Bytes = 11,048,576 Kilobytes = 1,024 Megabytes = 1 Gigabyte Disk Drives: 1,000,000,000 Bytes = 1,000,000 Kilobytes = 1,000 Megabytes = 1 Gigabyte
1 GB is the same as 1024 MB, so to answer your question, 2.6 GB of RAM is about 20 times the amount of RAM that 128 MB is. 2.6 GB is the larger amount.
1GB = 1024 MB So, 32 MB is the difference
Microsoft recommends 512 MB. For most uses, you will want 1 to 2 GB.
Gigabytes are bigger than Megabytes. RAM: 1,024 MB = 1 GB Disk Drives: 1,000 MB = 1 GB
No. There are exactly 1024 Megabytes (MB) in one Gigabyte (GB)MB stands for Megabyte - not to be confused with Mb which stands for megabitGB stands for Gigabyte - not to be confused with Gb which stands for GigabitYou have roughly about a third of a GB.
Windows XP can use any amount of RAM, there is no exact amount. The minimum is 256 MB, the recommended is 512 MB, and the best is 1 GB +.
Actually it is quite the opposite. The more RAM you have the more speed at which data can be transferred to the RAM. An example is if you have 512 Mb of RAM then 512 Mb of data will be transferred to the RAM at a time, but if you upgrade it to 1 GB of RAM then 1 GB of data will be transferred to the RAM at a time verses the 512 Mb. So the speed at which the RAM stores data will increase if the size of the RAM is increased. I hope this answers your question.