A megabyte is a unit of information storage equal to 8,388,608 bits. The cache buffer is an area of extremely fast-access memory used by the processor, so the larger the area, the more data could take advantage of this speed.
The "difference" between the two is self-evident.
The actual memory in a hard drive is called a cache. My current drive has a 32MB cache, This cache will store data coming into the hard drive if the data coming in is faster than the data being written down. While it does not help very much with larger files (movies, etc) it makes things move much faster if you are accessing a bunch of different files when playing a game for example.
Western Digital Caviar Black WD7501AALS 750GB 7200 RPM 32MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" Hard Drive costs around $79.99 and has tons of space and its from a respectable company.
1GB=1024Mb 1MB=1024Kb Than 32Mb Is equal to 32786kb 32Mb=32768kb
Is varies on the lenght of the song, and the compression used. ie 320kb/s, 128kb/s, 64 kb/s etc. The normally are between 3mb 7mb. If a somg is 32mb it is probably lossless, ie. no compression is used (.flac).
it will hold about 10 mp3 songs
Ghanta
Yes. 1GB = 1,000MB
The number of audiobooks that can fit in 32MB depends on the size of each audiobook file. On average, a high-quality audiobook may take up around 30-50MB, so in a 32MB space, you could potentially fit 1 to 2 audiobooks, depending on their file sizes.
It appears to be 16 depending on the value of mb
A Lot! 2^25 = 33,554,432 = 33MB Therefore, 25bits is needed for 32MB of memory You round it to 32MB because of Simplicity and other Hardware storage.
No, it won't make almost any difference. When you author a DVD, the part of your computer that works the hardest is the CPU, so to get faster you'll have to upgrade your processor (to a faster Pentium or Athlon).
The games that run on it are highly optimised to use only 32MB of RAM. This was only able to be done because Sony controlled the hardware, which meant that they only had to develop for one specific set of hardware.