Depends. Your average 'picture' on a site can be from 3-5k for a thumbnail or icon up to almost anything but usually around 50k for a background texture. I'm no good at math but I reckon the site we're on now would be well under a megabyte for the page. So... perhaps 3-4 views of a page such as this?
Quite simply, a kb is 1024 b (bits), a mb is 1024 kb, a gb is 1024 mb. You may have learned in school that kilo- means a thousand, and mega- means a million. This is basically true but needs further explanation.When referencing data, a kilobit typically is 210 (two to the tenth power), a megabit is 220, and gigabit is 230, etc., etc... Now, mB or MB (notice the caps) means megabyte which is 8 megabits; every 8 bits equals 1 byte.As far as megabytes go, 1024 bytes = 1 Kilobyte, 1024 KB = 1 MB, 1024 MB = 1 GB, etc.One byte can typically refer to one typed character (ASCII text is represented by 7 bits) and one bit is only a single 1 or 0, the basis of digital information.
That depends a lot on how you use your cell phone. Watching a movie will use a lot of MB per minute; listening to music or watching photographs less, and checking websites, or text messages (in WhatsApp, for example), even less. Even for one and the same activity, such as watching photographs, the number of MB can vary a lot, depending on the quality of the photo.In summary, there is no simple conversion factor that lets you convert from MB to minutes.
1,024 gigabytesOn a hard drive, a terabyte, abbreviated TB, is 1012 = 1,000,000,000,000 bytes of information. That is 1,024 times a gigabyte (GB) or 1,048,576 times a megabyte (MB), which is a million million bytes.Among other things, a computer often uses one byte of space, in memory or on disk or tape, to represent one character (such as "c" or "&").To think practically how much information a terabyte of disk space holds, let's assume we're storing text from magazine pages on a computer that does use one byte per character. At an average 5,000 characters per page, 1TB of disk space could hold 220 million pages of text!Remember when 3.5" floppy diskettes were all the rage ?It will take 728,178 of those disks to equal the storage capacity of a 1,024 gigabyte hard drive.
An index or a table of contents would be the most helpful in locating specific information about something. These text aids provide a roadmap of the content within a text and can direct you to the exact pages where the information you are looking for is located.
To convert 0.45 ATM to torr, you can use the conversion factor where 1 ATM equals 760 torr. Therefore, 0.45 ATM is calculated as follows: (0.45 , \text{ATM} \times 760 , \text{torr/ATM} = 342 , \text{torr}). Thus, 0.45 ATM is equal to 342 torr.
there would be 1,000 pages in 10mb
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megabyte
Unforunately, there is no answer to this. A web page consists of many elements, images, text, dynamic items (movies, sound, moving parts, basically), as well as programming, etc. To ask how many pages are in 3 mb is to ask how many pages is a book? It varies. It all depends on what the site holds, what is on those pages, and how it was coded.
Officially, Word 2003 and 2007 can handle documents up to 32 MB, which means if it is all text you can have 10,000 pages. Source: Microsoft Community Support.
Um I'm not sure what you mean by that but the term for gigabytes are 1000 megabytes = 1 terabyte 1000000 kilobytes = 1 terabyte 1000000000 bytes = 1 terabyte hope this was useful...
A megabyte can hold approximately 1 million bytes of data, which is equivalent to roughly 500 pages of plain text or a few minutes of audio or video.
It isn't clear how you would measure a text message in minutes. Normally, text messages have a length in characters - each character is probably 1 or 2 bytes. A byte, of course, is one millionth of a MB.
How many songs can 62.5 MB hold?WAV Files - 1MP3 Files - 13 if the MP3 files are saved at 160 to 320 kbps (approx 5.5MB each)Text Files - Tens of thousandsVideo Files - 1Word/Pages files - 600 +Excel/Numbers spreradsheets - 600 +62.5 MB isn't much but it's useful for small file storage.
sORRY aBOUT mY lUCK or My Bad; BKA: MB
Depends on the size of the text files. A 5000 word document can be about ~30kB. 1MB can contain ~33 of these such files or can possibly just one particularly large text file.
"The Pleasure of the Text" by Roland Barthes has 64 pages.