kb means kilo bytes. A byte is 8 bits which is the number of units in a computer word. Kilo is a thousand, so 1 kb=1,000 bytes, or computer words. I think this will explain your question.
KB = Kilo bytes which is equal to 1,000 bytes :)
As it goes for memory1024 kb make 1 mb and 1024 mb make 1 gb, 1024 gb-1 terabyteso obvoiusly the computer with 3 gb has larger memory.
Conventional memory refers to the memory reserved to run DOS programs in a computer system. DOS only uses the first 640 kb of memory in a PC.
if we are talking about memory in a computer,it is about 0.0000210GB im not cleaver enough to work out the exact amount but it is close enough for computer talk
Expanded memory was to use part of the remaining 384 KB, normally dedicated to communication with peripherals, for program memory as well. In order to fit potentially much more memory than the 384 KB of free address space would allow, a bankingscheme was devised, where only selected portions of the additional memory would be accessible at the same time. Originally, a single 64 KB window of memory was possible; later this was made more flexible. Applications had to be written in a specific way in order to access expanded memory.
KB refers to space, KB means Kilobyte.
KILA BYTE it is a memory unit
KB and MB stand for kilobyte (1,024 bytes) and megabyte (1,024 kilobytes). They are units of measurement of the storage capacity of computer memory, hard drives, USB sticks, DVD ROMs, etc.
Conventional
MB stands For Megabyte (well actually Mebibyte but everyone calls them Megabytes anyway) and KB is Kilobyte (Kibibyte, same deal). 1 MB = 1024KB
Not by today's standards. When I first got into computers - the Sinclair Spectrum I had - came with just 48 KB of memory. Modern computers come with at least 2 Gigabytes (or 2,097,152 KB) as standard !
4 kb