1024 MB = 1GB.
Shaun
An average CD can hold 700 MB of data.
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.
Certainly. CDs and CD-RWs usually hold between 650 and 700 Mb of data.
A Blu-Ray disc can hold up to a maximum of 50 GB (5 times more data than a DVD can hold). Each movie consumes different data space
An audio CD typically can hold up to 700 MB.
650-700 mb.
3.5" and 5.25" were available in a variety of capacities. 3.5" disks maxed out at 2.88 MB, while 5.25" topped out at 1.2 MB. It is quite possible for a 5.25" disk to hold more data than some 3.5" disks.
A mini CD can hold one third of the data capacity of a full size CD. A mini CD is 80mm and can hold up to 24 minutes of music, which is 210 megabytes of data. A full size CD is 120mm and can hold up to 650 megabytes of data.
Normal audio CDs hold 700 megabytes of data.
A stick of 512 megabytes of RAM can hold about 512 megabytes of data. It cannot, however, store it for long because it is volatile and is not designed to store data.
A megabyte can hold approximately 1 million bytes of data, which is equivalent to roughly 500 pages of plain text or a few minutes of audio or video.
A gig is a slang term for a gigabyte. Thus, they both hold the same amount of data: 1024 megabytes.