Old 3.5" floppy disks held around 1.4 MB.
1 GB is 1024 MB (possibly only 1000 MB) and therefore is more.
Depends. The memory capacity varies. Plus it is listed always on the flash drive itself. The memory ranges from up to 128 MB to 1 TB. MB=megabyte TB=Terabyte
8 GB (gigabytes) is more storage than 16 MB (megabytes).
4,101.305 MB, but because of the way memory works, you actually don't have a 5GB hard drive. It probably only holds about 4.6 or 4.7 GB of memory.
PSPHas No Memory but it's settings and apps, Need a Memory Stick, 1Gb Or 2Gb.PS2Has 8 Mb(memory stick) XboxHas 600mbXbox360Has 15gbXbox 360 EliteHas 60gb or morePS3Has over 50gbPS3 Elitehas over 60gb
The EVGA GeForce 9500 holds 512 MB of memory for mos models.
"Memory stick" usually refers to a general-purpose memory-containing device that can plug into a computer's USB port. The computer sees the memory as an additional drive. A memory stick is also called a thumb drive or flash drive. The memory stick device is externally a case that can be easily handled and kept in a pocket or on a lanyard or key chain. The memory stick is inserted temporarily into a computer and used to transfer information to or from one computer to another, although there is now other equipment, such as audio equipment, that can read the device. "Memory card" usually refers to a small, thin memory-containing card that is used as the main data storage in devices such as cell phones and digital cameras. The memory card has exposed contacts and thus is usually left completely protected inside the device using it. It may, however, be removed and used to transfer data to computers, printers, or other equipment. In fact, you can obtain a small memory-card carrier, having a USB plug, that holds the memory card. That memory-containing, USB-pluggable device is now, for all purposes, a memory stick.
DVD by far. A DVD can store 4.7 gigabytes of data. A floppy disk can store 1.44 megabytes of data. 1000 megabytes = 1 gigabyte.
8 MB to 2 GB of RAM depending on factors such as non-ECC and ECC technology.
The original Memory Stick was about the size of a piece of chewing gum and could hold 4-128MB of memory. A Memory Stick Select was the upgrade from there which could hold 2 separate 128 MB partitions which you could switch back and forth from using. PRO and Duo are other formats of Memory Sticks. PRO holds 4 GB of memory. Duo are the same but just smaller. PRO Duo quickly replaced the original Duo and holds 16GB of memory with a 32 GB forcasted for 2009. PRO-HG Duo is the same as PRO Duo but 3 times as fast. Memory Stick Micro is the newest fad since a lot of cell phones are accessible to these now. They are the smallest version of a memory stick and can hold 128MB, 256 MB, 512 MB, 1 GB, 2 GB, 4 GB, 8GB or 16GB's of memory.
The portable storage device that holds the least amount of data currently is the 3. 5 inch floppy diskette with its 1. 44 MB capacity. The almost completely extinct 5. 25 inch floppies used to hold even less data; 360 KB.
Either can hold more than the other depending on which units you are comparing. The largest Zip drives can hold 750 Mb. The limit to microdrives is 8000 Mb (8 Gb) if they are formatted with a file system that can address so much memory.