Either 7,200 or 7,372, depending on your definition of "kilobyte".
A Music CD can hold up to 700Mbs, which equals to 700,000,000 bytes, aprox.
There is no such thing as a typical computer program. Some programs are tiny occupying just a few kilobytes of computer memory, others are massive, occupying many megabytes. The amount of code required is a function of the complexity of the problem you are trying to solve.
MegabyteA byte, usually comprised of eight bits, is a measure of computer information. Each bit contains a binary value of either 1 or 0. A megabyte contains 1,048,576 bytes of information, or 8,388,608 bits.TextOne text character contains one byte of information. A typical typed page without any images contains about two kilobytes, or 1,024 bytes of information. A megabyte, therefore, can support about 500 typed pages.
The typical laptop has around 4 Gigabytes (4096 MB) of RAM memory.
No. Much, much more than that. On average one movie is 2GB. That's two gigabytes. A high definition (HD) movie would be around 3 or 4.5GB
typical network speed bits and bites / sacends k, k b , mb
While typical dial-up speeds are on average 50 KILOBYTES per second, broadband internet can generate speeds up to 4 MEGABYTES per second on average, and even higher depending on the provider. So the difference is vast, and well worth the upgrade with time saved.
7.5
GB(Gygabytes) or MB(megabytes)
Typical capacity of a CD is nominally 700MB, and is usually a few MB higher.
The digital photo's MB depends on the brightness in the photo and it depends on contrasts too.
If you do not care about quality, movies are typically around 700MB (640x480, mp3 2 channel, low bitrate). But if you are like me and do not want the quality to be terrible, than the movie should be atleast 2GB (720x480 or higher, mp3 2 channel, high bitrate or more desirably 5.1 channel high bitrate). I find the best 2 ways to find good quality movie downloads is using the pirate bay and sorting by size from high to low, or the same with filestube. Always go for the larger sizes if aiming for quality. A 700MB movie will look and sound terrible on typical monitors or flat screen televisions.