Iomega.
There are three different capacities of ZIP disks, 100 MB, 250 MB, and 750 MB. A 100 MB disk holds 104,857,600 bytes, a 250 MB disk holds 262,144,000 bytes, and a 750 MB disk holds 786,432,000 bytes.
It comes in a number of capacities: 100, 250 and 750 Mb
A Zip disk was a brand of removable (and reusable) storage. They came in two varieties; the original Zip disks held 100 MB and the second generation held 250 MB. A Zip drive was a piece of hardware designed for reading these disks. The original drives could only take the 100 MB disks, later ones could take either the 100 or 250 MB disks. You don't see them much anymore, because even 250 MB is peanuts. A drive cost $100 or more, and the disks were several dollars each ... you can buy a USB "thumb drive" that holds as much as several Zip disks for less than the cost of a single Zip disk, and that's ignoring the cost of the drive to read them. So: very definitely hardware, not software, though you did have to have the proper drivers (software) for the drive to get it to work.
It is: (250/100)*100 = 250%
100. 250/100*40=100.
250/100 = 250 ÷ 100 = 2.5
250/100 = 250 ÷ 100 = 2.5
100/250 x 100 = 40 Therefore, 100 is 40 percent of 250.
100% of 250 = 250 10% of 250 = 25 (250 /10) 100% (250) + 10% (25) = 110% (275)
It is: 100+250 = 350
0.4 x 250 = 100
Well, darling, if you want to know what percentage 100 is of 250, it's quite simple. Just divide 100 by 250, which gives you 0.4. Then, multiply that by 100 to get your percentage, which is 40%. Voilà!