First of all, your grammar is terrible. So before getting a computer, finish grade school and finish your spelling homework. Also, there is no data memory in computers, it is on the memory drives or other parts that can withhold the memory of all those 1's and 0's.
it depends on what size the drive is.
A High Definition Digital Versatile Disc or HD-DVD holds 15 GB per layer (a regular DVD holds 4.7 GB per layer)
bytes, megabytes and Gigabytes are the units for measuring the amout of data on a computer. 1024 megabytes are a gigabyte
Yes,your computer will run very fast sims 2 and all ep
There is no 1 Gigabyte Itouch but the following sizes hold: * 8GB, 16GB, or 32GB flash drive1 * Holds up to 1,750, 3,500, or 7,000 songs in 128-Kbps AAC format
The xD-Picture card is t he lastest and greatest flash card, it has a compact design and currently holds up to 8 GB of data.
hardrive
Use a Dual Layer DVD that holds 7.2 GB a normal DVD only holds 4.2 GB
320-750gb
GB holds more than MB In the computer unit of measuring 1000kb = 1MB 1000MB = 1GB Therefore 47.2 GB would be greater than 68.6 MB
The amount of RAM a computer can have is limited by the motherboard (something like 12 GB is reasonable), and the hard drive space is limited by how large they make them (something around 1,500 GB per connection available on the motherboard is reasonable)
On your basic common computer today anywhere from 1 GB to 3 GBs is common. For a gaming computer 4 is about the minimum ranging all the way up to 32 which is way overkill.
1.0 GB holds up to 250 songs 4.0 GB holds up to 1,000 songs 8.0 GB holds up to 2,000 songs
2 nibbles = 1 byte 1024 bytes = 1 kilobyte 1024 kilobytes = 1 megabyte 1024 megabytes = 1 gigabyte 1024 gigabytes = 1 terabyte.
For an average computer user 1 GB of RAM is fine. But if you are going to do a lot of multi-tasking, do video editing or just want fast internet, try to get 2GB of RAM.
the more gigabytes the more songs it holds
Asuming you mean Megabytes, or Mbps, then no. There is ruffly 1000 mbps in 1 Gb. So a 100 Gb drive can hold 100000 Mbps. The average computer in 2011 has a 250 to 500 GB hard drive.
A High Definition Digital Versatile Disc or HD-DVD holds 15 GB per layer (a regular DVD holds 4.7 GB per layer)