Ok So the industries is 1,000 GB equals to 1TB But In real computer term a gb is actually 1024mb so 1024*1000= 1024000= 1tb
1000 gb equal 1 tb Edit: actually, there are 1024 gigabytes in a terabyte.
1000 GB make 1TB
1,024 gb = 1tb.
The base 21.5" iMac comes with a 4GB of Ram and a 500 GB hard drive. You can upgrade to 8 GB of Ram. Top of the line 21.5" iMac can be upgraded to 16GB of Ram and comes with a 1TB hard drive and can be upgraded to a 2 TB hard drive. The 27" iMac comes with 4GB of Ram and 1TB hard drive. Can be upgraded to 16GB of Ram and a 2TB hard drive.
The range for a multimedia drive is between 120 GB to over 1TB in size. This enables one to store files, photographs, music, games and it is advisable to look for a model with at least 500 GB in order to have enough room.
Apple's configuration options for the MacBook go up to a 500GB (5400-rpm) hard drive. The problem will be finding a suitable 2.5" 1TB drive. There is a kit available that gives you 2 500 GB drives which replaces the MacBook's optical drive with a second 500GB drive giving you 1TB. Apple provides instructions for replacing hard drives. (See links below)
A 1TB drive has aprox. 1000GB of memory. So 1TB has 250GB more memory than any 750GB drive.
1 TB (terabyte = 2^40) = 1024 GB ( gigabyte = 2^30)
yes a terabyte is essentially 1000 gigabytes
you have 1TB on a hard drive but you only have 950 gb what happened to the other 50 gb
No, 1TB is 1024GB, 128x larger than 8GB.