You only need one bit to denote 0 or 1... so 1/8th of a byte would be enough. The actual space taken to store the number 1 would be defined by the type of the variable that is holding the number... if you were programming in C, and used the integer type to store the value 1, it would use 2 bytes - those two bytes, in binary, would read 0000000000000001.
16% 1,048,576 bytes
About 500 Mega Bytes or so.
Speaking in terms of computer storage, a GB (gigabyte) is 1,0243 bytes, or 1,073,741,824 bytes. Other, less common, applications of the term use the literal value of 1,000,000,000.
A) o bytes
I don't know how to measure computer storage space in any units other than those you've already used. I guess I could give the value in bytes. A petabyte is 250 bytes, or (roughly) 1015 bytes.
KB = Kilo(1000)byte A KB of data can hold 2^10 =1024 Bytes of Information
199998.31 bytes or 1.9999831 megabytes
The limit on the number of packets that a capture program can save usually depends on how much disk space you have, since that is where the captured packets will be stored.
GB stands for gigabyte and on the iPod indicates how much storage space the device has. Bytes are a measure of data size. 1GB is equal to 1,073,741,824 bytes of data.
A MB is a megabyte 1000KB=1MB 1000MB=1KB
Each MB (megabyte) is usually taken as 1024 KB, each KB is 1024 bytes. So, a MB is a little more than a million characters (in the traditional ASCII character set - Unicode often takes up more space).Each MB (megabyte) is usually taken as 1024 KB, each KB is 1024 bytes. So, a MB is a little more than a million characters (in the traditional ASCII character set - Unicode often takes up more space).Each MB (megabyte) is usually taken as 1024 KB, each KB is 1024 bytes. So, a MB is a little more than a million characters (in the traditional ASCII character set - Unicode often takes up more space).Each MB (megabyte) is usually taken as 1024 KB, each KB is 1024 bytes. So, a MB is a little more than a million characters (in the traditional ASCII character set - Unicode often takes up more space).
102841344 bytes