Kilobyte (derived from the SI prefix "kilo-", meaning 1,000) is a unit of digital information storage equal to either 1,000 bytes (103) or 1,024 bytes (210), depending on context.
The prefix kilo- refers to the number 1000. This is the standard, official definition, used to measure hard drives, DVDs, networking hardware, etc. This is what Mac OS X and Linux use to measure disk and file sizes.
Regarding computer memory, it is usually used as a unit of 2 to the power of 10, or 1024. This is officially incorrect usage, and should be written "KiB", for "kilobinary byte".
Bytes are smaller. It takes 1024 of them to make a kilobyte.
Assuming that KB stands for kilobyte, then the next smallest abbreviation would be B for bytes. A byte is usually defined as eight bits.
Kilobyte (KB) 1/1024 of a MB.
Kilobyte
There are 8192 bits in a kilobyte.
there are 50000 gigabytes in a kilobyte
a kilobyte is 1024 bytes
1 KiloByte = 1 KB
1 kilobyte (kB) = 1000 bytes
There are exactly 1024 megabytes (MB) in 1 Kilobyte (KB).
There are officially 1000 bytes in a kilobyte, while memory manufacturers will use 1024 bytes in a kilobyte (also called a "kilobinary byte"). None. There are 1,000 bytes in a kilobyte. 1024 bytes
1000 bytes =1 kilobyte
Yes. There are 1,048,676 kb in a gigabyte.
A kilobyte is large because it holds thousands of whatever, and it also depends on what your trying to store on whatever it is that has a kilobyte of space.
A Kilobyte is equal to 1000 bytes