Not really, although in the early days of computing, you could do a lot with small amounts of memory. For example, the Sinclair Spectrum computer had 48kb of internal memory, which enabled it to do some pretty complex stuff (yes - I had one !) These days, computer memory is usually measured in Megabytes or Gigabytes - due to the advances in the amount of information computer chips can hold.
kilobytes
The original Apple II came with four Kilobytes of RAM which could be expanded to forty eight kilobytes of RAM. A typical computer today will come with two Gigabytes of RAM which is more than two million kilobytes.
In this context K probably means kilobyte which compares to gigabytes (GB) thusly. 1024 kilobytes = 1 megabyte 1024 megabytes = 1 gigabyte So 1 gigabyte equals 1048576 kilobytes. My current computer has 2 gigabytes of ram, 20-some-odd years ago my first computer had 16 kilobytes
1 Gigabyte
2.22 mb is only 2273.28 in kilobytes and 200 mb is 204800 kilobytes so no, 200 mb is a lot more bigger
0.00771GB
KB = Kilo bytes which is equal to 1,000 bytes :)
A Gigabyte is a unit of measuring how much info a computer can store or how big a file is. It is equivilent to 1000 megabytes which is 1000 kilobytes which is 1000 Bytes. IN other terms, a gig is 1000000000 bytes. For comparison for what this can hold, a picture is around 30 kilobytes.
With high definition film you can use up a lot of space quickly.
On Intel processors used in the typical PC each Page is 64 kilobytes.
There are 1024 kilobytes in a megabyte, 1024 megabytes in a gigabyte. There are 1,048,576 kilobytes in a gigabyte. (Unless you ask a computer manufacturer, in which case there are 1,000,000 kilobytes in a gigabyte, but that's why they have had class action lawsuits filed against them)
1024 kilobytes X 3 megabytes = 3072 kilobytes