If you're thinking of replacing your hard-drive - then yes ! The vastly increased capacity will not only give you much more space for programs and data, but the computer will also make use of the extra free-space on the hard-drive - which will speed-up your system.
It is 300 for the 120 gb and 350 for the 250 gb
it depends on how long the songs are
1 Terabyte S.A.T.A. 350 Gigabyte S.S.D.
10 GB is a capacity of hard-drive most likely. A GB (giga byte) is a unit of measurement for storing data (music, documents, photos etc.) on a computer. These days 10 GB is quite small. Most computers should come with a 200 GB hard drive at minimum as of 2009.
the one i have is 200 usually 8 gb are 200 and the 16 are 300 and the 32 gb are 350
i don't know i think 350 i seen one
350MB is not even close to being a GB there are 1024MB in 1GB.
As long as you aren't streaming HD video, 10 GB should suffice.
10% of 150 gb = 15 gb
If you forgot to add a decimal between 0 and 3 then 0.35 gigabytes equates to about 350 megabytes. If you meant 35 gigabytes then it equates to about 35,000 megabytes.
1 CD's maximum capacity of storage is 700 MB 1000 MB = 1 GB 10 CD's would be 7,000 MB = 7 GB 50 CD's = 35,000 MB = 35 GB 100 CD's = 70,000 MB = 70 GB 500 CD's = 350,000 MB = 350 GB You now need to work out 150 GB, which is 200 CD's + abit exta. 200 CD's = 140,000 MB = 140 GB + 10 GB (the extra) = 7,000 MB = 7 GB GRAND TOTAL: 710 CD's = 497,000 MB = 497-500 GB <it is impossible to put equal CD's in 500 GB>
about £300 to £360. In the USA $299 120 GB or $350 for the 250 GB and for the 160 GB and 320 GB by the end of 2010 Move bundles were $50 more for the 320 GB