No
None, because there can be no conversion.A mph is a measure of speed, with dimensions [LT^-1]. A mHz is a measure of frequency with dimensions [T^-1]. According to the most basic rules of dimensional analysis, conversion between two measures with different dimensions is not valid.
processor can be classified by speed and make
Well this is a twofold answer because pressure itself does not mean anything when it comes to wind but rather pressure gradient or how fast the pressure drops over a given area. The faster the pressure drops over a small area the stronger the wind is forced to blow.Now lets take 2 examples here: atmospheric pressure 915 mb pressure drop: 25 mb Distance: 100 miles pressure drop/mile = 1/4 mb atmospheric pressure: 990 mb pressure drop: 25 mb Distance: 100 miles pressure drop/mile = 1/4 mb in these 2 situations the wind would blow the same speed. However like most situations the standard air pressure outside of the system would be around the same pressure or around 1010 mb so if we have the same 2 storms again but one of the storms is much larger then the other storm here is the result: atmospheric pressure 915 mb pressure drop: 95 mb Distance: 380 miles pressure drop/mile = 1/4 mb atmospheric pressure: 990 mb pressure drop: 20 mb Distance: 80 miles pressure drop/mile = 1/4 mb Again the wind speed would be the same since we are still falling at 1/4 mb per mile. So atmospheric pressure, storm size, surrounding air pressure, and other factors all come into play here... however if you had 2 of the same sized storms in the same atmospheric conditions but one had a pressure of 915 mb and the other had an air pressure of 990 mb the one with the 915 would have a higher wind speed due to a higher pressure gradient.
You use exactly the same instruments to measure speed in the metric system as you use in any other system. For example, a speedometer, or a distance measuring device and a stopwatch. The difference is that these devices are calibrated in metric units, instead of old-fashioned units.
High Temp: 26.1°F * Low Temp: 10°F Average Temp: 16.9°F ( 24 ) Dewpoint: 4.4°F ( 24 ) Sea Level Pressure: 1031 mb ( 24 ) Station Pressure: 997.3 mb ( 24 ) Visibility: 14.8 miles ( 24 ) Wind Speed: 4.5 knots ( 24 ) Max Wind Speed: 11.1 knots Max Wind Gust: n/a Precipitation Amount: 0 inches G Snow Depth: n/a Observations: Snow/Ice Pellets
fsb is the speed at which the processor receive or send data to ram , mb, or other chips through bus sushanta mohanty cuttack
Those are different forms of measurement: Megabytes are a measure of space in computers, minutes are measures of time. You may be asking about how many megabytes you can download in a minute. THat number varies widely with processor speed, internet connection, and other factors.
They are two different things. the 1.66ghz is the speed of your processor, while 512MB is the size of your RAM or memory.
You can but the lag would be horrendous
The memory of a computer is measured in bits, most commonly megabytes (MB) and gigabytes (GB). The speed of a computer is measured in Ghz.
1.6 GHZ refers to the processor speed not the memory so your question can not be answered. Memory will be measured in megabytes.
0.14 is a number. If you give a unit of measure (mb/sec, gb/sec) it can be determined.
I believe the term you meant is MBPS, unless you truly were asking about Mega Pits Ber Second. MB per second is a measurment of connection speed to a network. MB is just a measure of memory. It's kind of like Miles per Hour: a measure of speed based on how much gets done over a period of time.
The Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 processor has a 2.4 MHz clock speed, 4 MB L2 cache and 1066 MHz FSB Speed. It features an enhanced Intel SpeedStep technology Processor Fan and Thermal Monitoring Technology.
Hours are measures of time, and megabytes are a measure of memory. These two are not compatible. If you mean how long does it take to download 50 MBs, the speed varies depending on your connection speed. You might be able to download this in 5 to ten minutes.
Possibly. You need at least a 2.0 GHz processor but on a Mac it needs less processor speed than on a Windows PC. You have enough Ram and a good enough Graphics Card but the processor may let you down.
A Gb is a Gigabyte. A MB is a Megabyte, These terms represent digital storage capacity, not speed. Speed would be measured in terms like Gigahertz or Megahertz. And of course since Giga is a larger prefix than Mega, Gigabytes would be faster.