Almost. The "G" in "GB" is the same "G". It stands for "giga", as in "gigantic". It's used in English to stand for a billion of something. In the case of "GB", it's a billion bytes.
I hope that answers your question.
F# and Gb are enharmonics. They share the same pitch, but have different functions in musical notation. Especially attuned musicians may differentiate F# and Gb particularly when they appear as thirds or fifths of chords, but yes, they are enharmonic equivalents.
They are the same - sometimes they use GB (Gigabyte) or G (gigs). They are equal.
You can also play it A A B C C B A G Gb Gb G A A G G A A B C C B A G Gb Gb G A G Gb Gb I have a clarinet and I <3 this song! Go Beethoven!
There is one "G" in "GB". What is your question?
Bb-A-G-E-D-G-B-A B-C G-A Bb-A-G-E-D-G-B-A B-C Gb-G Eb-E G-AG-A-B-Gb-B G-Gb-E-Gb-B Gb-G-B Gb-E-D-C-B-A-G-Gb-D-BBb-A-G-E-D-G-B-A Gb-Gb-C-C-Gb-Gb-A-BG-A-B D-D-C-C-B-B-A E-E-G-G-B-B-D-D D-D-C-C-B-B-A E-E-G-G-B-B-E-E-Gb D-D-C-C-B-B-A G-G-C-C-E-E-A-A-Gb D-D-C-C-B-B-A G-G-C-C-E-E-A-A A-A-G-E-E-D-B-AE-E-G-G-B-B-D-D A-A-G-E-E-D-B-A G-A-B D-D-C-C-B-B-A E-E-G-G-B-B-D-D-Gb D-D-C-C-B-B-A G-G-C-C-E-E-A-A-Gb D-D-C-C-B-B-A G-G-C-C-E-E-A-A-BThese are the notes but i dont no what hand is which?? Sorry
1.04gb!!
1000 g
0.25 GB
The notes that sound the same but are written differently are called enharmonic notes. An example of this is the notes F# (F sharp) and Gb (G flat) – they are played and sound the same but are notated differently.
is like stupid thing like c c gb c c cb a a g a a ag f f fa g g gb c c gb
There is a 80 G and 120 G so I don't think they will make a 60
Gb, Ab, Bb, Cb, Db, Eb, F, G