It is the memory capacity of the storage unit.
-- take the number of bits per second-- divide it by 8-- the result is the number of Bytes per second
Megabytes (Mb), Gigabytes (Gb) and Terabytes (Tb) are common words to describe computer storage. A pen-drive (USB device) could store as little as 32Mb of data - a typical DVD can store 4.7Gb, and modern hard-drives are being produced that can hold a 10Tb or more !
One billion bytes is called a gigabyte. One billion meters is a gigameter.
none... its measured in bytes * * * * * It depends on the context. Capacity, in the sense of data storage, is measured in bytes. IN other contexts, it may be measured in cubic centimetres, or litres or other related units.
10000 bytes = 9.765625 kb
capacity
Bytes
Bytes
1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes or 1018 bytes
A bit is a single 1 or 0. A Byte is 8 bits.
Storage is measured in a hierarchy of bytes.
Almost 1 megabyte because 1 megabyte is a unit of computer memory or data storage capacity, equal to 1,048,576 (220) bytes.
An absolute address is the identification of a fixed location in real storage in terms of the number of bytes from the beginning.
A byte is smaller than a megabyte.1 bit = one "on" or "off" in a binary computer or storage medium.1 byte = 8 bits.1 kilabyte = 1,000 bytes, or 8,000 bits.1 megabyte = 1,000,000 bytes.
1 bytes
One Sector on storage media constitutes of 512 Bytes.
Computer storage is usually measured in bytes. A byte is equal to 8 bits. A bit is a single piece of binary information (a 1 or a 0).For example, if you have 16 ones and zeros of information, then that is 16 bits, or 2 bytes.1,000 bytes is called a kilobyte; 1,000,000 bytes is called a megabyte, and 1,000,000,000 bytes is called a gigabyte. Today's computers store many billions of bytes, so these days you'll see a computer storage capacity measured in GB (gigabytes). For example, I have a computer at home with 500 GBs of storage. Therefore, it holds 5,000,000,000 bytes.However, it gets confusing when the number of bytes in a kilobyte, or megabyte, etc. is calculated using powers of 2, which is historically how it has been done. Things like kilobyte, megabyte, etc. needed to be expressed as a multiple of 2. Therefore, a kilobyte, instead of being strictly 1,000, is 2^10 = 1,024 bytes. A megabyte is 2^20 = 1,048,576 bytes. Therefore, let's say you have a disk that can hold 450,000,000 bytes. Using the binary definition of megabyte, that is 429.15 MB, and not 450 MB. This has led to consumer confusion, when someone buys a computer that claims 750 MB but Windows reports 715.256 MB.