I would say '1' is pretty low.....
It really depends on the system you're talkinga bout. For instance, some ipods are 2GB... and some are 160GB.. that's 2048MB & 163840MB respectively. In the case of ipods, 2048MB is low.
What are you trying to compare?
Any pressure below 29.92 in or 1013.2 mb
The threshold for low barometric pressure is typically considered to be below 29.92 inches of mercury (inHg) or 1013.25 millibars (mb).
512 MB for XP isn't necessarily considered "low memory." If you consider Firefox to be too slow, you may want to consider either K-Meleon or Opera.
Yes, 1040mb is a very high surface pressure.
Low pressure in terms of weather systems is typically considered to be any pressure reading below 29.92 inches of mercury (inHg) or 1013.25 millibars (mb). This usually indicates unsettled weather conditions such as clouds, precipitation, and potentially stormy conditions.
A megabyte of memory can contain ONE of the following:* About a million letters of plain text - equivalent to about 300 pages. * One photograph in decent quality. * Several photographs in medium or low quality. The exact amount depends on the size and quality of the photographs. * One minute of sound (for instance, MP3), in high quality. * Several minutes of sound in low quality. Note that one MB (megabyte) is a fairly small amount for a modern computer. As of 2017, computers typically have several GB (thousands of MB) of RAM memory, and somewhere between 0.5 and 3 TB (millions of MB) of hard disk space.
Yes, although the amount of RAM installed by default (512 MB) is a little low, and the machine does not have a particularly powerful processor.
The amount of megabytes that are used to download an app or application will vary depending on the size of the application. Each individual app is a different amount of megabytes.
No it is not in today's society 514.4 megabytes is a small amount of data. The newer faster computers deal in gigabytes and even the programs that use the megabyte system is low. This is about the time I start cleaning up my hard drive when it reaches the megabyte range on the free space.
700 mb
"Megabytes in" is the amount of data transferred from the internet to the computer; "megabytes out" is the opposite.
Any pressure below 29.92 in or 1013.2 mb