Depending on your needs, it may be more than enough, adequate, or too small. It is by no means an exceptionally large capacity; even larger drive can be had for less than $100, and drives up to 1.5 TB are available commercially.
Say the operating system takes up 20gb.
300gb left.
That leaves room for:
20,000 high-quality JPEGs (pictures)
---or---
75 complete DVDs
---or---
37,000 high-quality, 5 minute, MP3 songs
---or---
20 installations of WoW (it's a really big game)
---or---
900 good-quality, 10 minute, AVIs (video)
---or---
8,000 YouTube videos (pretty low quality usually, max 10 minutes most are less than 5)
---or---
1,000+ programs + data (hard to say)
---or---
100+ computer games (again, hard to say)
I would think so because my computer only has 74 GB , and my laptop carries somewhere about 120-170 GB.
640 Gb is quite a lot for a domestic computer, but many office systems would hold much more data than that.
This hard drive is 320 GB.
There is 640 GB's of space. That is 355360 MB's.
640 Kilobytes equals 0.0006 Gigabytes.
That the computer is able to hold 640 gigabytes of information
160Ghz to 1024Ghz. there really is no limit on how much RAM you could have
Largest I've heard of is 320 gig but 640 should be coming out soon
Assuming you are referring to a gigabyte it is a billion bytes. That may be a lot or a little depending on the situation and use
ya
Yes. Any computer manufactured since 2002, including the Intel D945GCPE, can support a theoretical maximum of 144 petabytes (144 million gigabytes) per drive.
yes
a LOT!
No.
Gigabyte makes boards specifically for gaming, which usually comes with a lot of heat.