1 MB (megabyte) may either refer to exactly a million bytes, or a bit more, depending on the definition used.
976.5625kb
Almost 1 Megabyte. 1 Megabyte is a unit of computer memory or data storage capacity, equal to 1,048,576 (220) bytes.
One million bytes are approximately equal to 1 Mb (megabyte) according to SI-prefixes.
Yes. The standard definition is now 10^6 bytes. Historically, it could have represented 1,048,576 bytes (2^20 bytes), a value now defined as a mebibyte (million-binary byte).
With the metric system, one million is described by the prefix Mega (capital M). One million bytes (b) would be a Megabyte or Mb.
A unit of information equal to 220 bytes or loosly, one million bytes
To get a pretty much correct answer, multiply the KB by one million. (There are about one million KB in one GB).
1024 Bytes = 1 Kilobyte 1024 Kilobytes = 1 Megabyte 1 Megabyte = 10242 Bytes= 1,048,576 Bytes
It is roughly one million bytes.
A "block" is a sizeable unit of computer data. In contrast to the conventional sector (which is set at 512 bytes), a block can be smaller or bigger (it can be equivalent to one or more units of at least one sector, called a cluster).
A megabyte is one million bytes, each byte being a sequence of 8 bits, which is enough information to represent one character of alphanumeric data.
1,099,511,627,776 bytes. One trillion ninety-nine million five hundred eleven million six hundred twenty-seven thousand seven hundred seventy-six bytes.
One megabyte is one million bytes of information.