3 Megabytes? Not very much in today's data rich world. Most songs won't fit on 3 Meg. You might be able to get a dozen or so pictures, depending on the resolution. That is a only a little more than 2 of the old 3 1/2 inch floppy disks could hold. You probably meant a 3 Gigabyte flash drive which is commonly available. Then you are talking a lot of stuff!
If you're talking about text then:
Roughly speaking one letter is one byte.
1K = 1024 bytes
1M = 1024 K
So you have 3145728 letters BUT spaces, commas, returns etc. also count as letters and formatting instructions such as font and letter size also take up room.
barley anything. barley anything. Well, in terms of A4 pages of text, or average e-mails accessed per MB?
Almost as much as two DVD disks, or about the same as 10 CD roms.
1,024 bytes of information, or about one short paragraph of text.
Get yourself a bigger flash drive.
=how much can a 128mb flash drive hold?=
well 961mb is just under 1gb
A flash drive can hold anywhere from 256 MB to 8 GB.
About 4 gb
4.0 Gigabytes duhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
It will hold your xbox live account but not much more
There are thin fibers in the middle of every flash drive that help to secure all of the data. The strength of the fibers determines how much data you can hold.
TRUE
It depends on how big the music files are
USB flash drives hold large amounts of information due to the advances in silicon technology. The storage inside the flash drive is very small and dense. This allows the manufacturer to build a small flash drive that can store gigabytes of data.
its not much different besides the flash drive being smaller space alot of people think dvds can only hold videos but thats not true
Can a 256 gb hold as much as 30k karaoke songs
Not all flash drives are the same. Some will hold as low as 512MB while a few will hold as much as 128000MB (128GB). The most common amount of capacity (now days) for a flash drive is 1000MB (1GB).
A CD is useful if you are going to play music in an older stereo or car. Most will have a CD player. Some newer CD players will play CD's with MP3 compressed audio, extending the play time by as much as 90%. A flash drive is useful if you want to hold more music (most flash drives hold much more than 1 Gigabyte (1024MB) of info, CD's top out at 800MB. Flash drives can also hold any type of compressed audio or higher-than-CD quality audio (higher than 16 bit, 44.1kHz). Flash drives also have no moving parts, and are not as susceptible to extreme temperatures, scratching or moisture.