No it is not in today's society 514.4 megabytes is a small amount of data. The newer faster computers deal in gigabytes and even the programs that use the megabyte system is low. This is about the time I start cleaning up my hard drive when it reaches the megabyte range on the free space.
Not really, depending on the file type. For example if it is a pdf file that is 147 mega bytes that will be considered a lot. But really 147 megabytes isn't really alot. 147 gigabytes would be a lot. Just remember that 8 bits make a byte and 1024 bytes makes a kilobyte and 1024 kilobytes make a gigabyte and 1024 gigabytes makes a tetrabyte. Hope that helps.
It is about half a GB.
512Mb is also the amount of ram windows XP Requires to Run.
147 equals Maximum Break in Snooker.
I don't know... 147 meatballs in sauce? :)
Maximum break in snooker.
It is not considered to be a lot (Especially compared with Terabytes, and Gigabytes) , a 4 minute video is 160 Mb, and a 30 min audio clip is about 20 Mb though.
um, a lot more. a GB is either 1000 (10^3) MB or 1024 (2^10) MB. so 5 GB would be 5000 MB, which is a lot more than 44.791 MB.
Well 500 Megabytes(MB) is roughly half of one Gigabyte(GB). so depending on how much space your computer hard drive holds will determine your definition of "a lot".this is the official measurement posted by Google....1 gigabyte = 1024 megabytes .Most modern domestic computers have hundreds of gigabytes of memory - in that context 500 MB is not a lot.
a whole lot of space.
1 GB = 1000 MB so in 250 GB there is 250 000 MB. Which is a lot.
2.22 mb is only 2273.28 in kilobytes and 200 mb is 204800 kilobytes so no, 200 mb is a lot more bigger
Not by today's standards. The average song file is at least 3 MB, so you could only put about 16 songs into 50 MB.
Not really a normal application takes about 20-30MB.
64 mb is not very much 64 mb = 0,064 gb 64 mb equals about 12 normal songs