false
If you are sending a regular email without attachments, it will be less than 100 kilobytes. Adding attachments will increase the size of the email.
Nope! 3k = 3,000 3kb would be kilobytes.
Not by a long shot. I think the a low estimate for a film is maybe 400mb. (Probably 3 or more times that). This means it is min. 400,000 kilobytes, so way more than what you've proposed.
Kilobytes are a measure of data size, not time. This would be the same as asking how many kilograms are in a meter. If you're asking about time taken to transfer five kilobytes, then the answer is very few. On a good dial-up connection, you can transfer five kilobytes in about one second, so the answer would be roughly 1/3600. On other types of connections it would be even less.
There are 10 kilobytes in 10,000 bytes. This is because 1 kilobyte is equal to 1,024 bytes. Therefore, to convert 10,000 bytes to kilobytes, you would divide 10,000 by 1,024, which equals approximately 9.77 kilobytes. Since kilobytes are typically rounded to the nearest whole number, 10,000 bytes would be considered 10 kilobytes.
Yes, they do. If you just go to the Amtrak website, you can figure out your itinerary. It would probably be around $60.
K stands for Kilobyte, a unit for measurement of data capacity. So for example a computer that has 256K (kilobytes) of memory can store around 256,000 bytes (or characters) in the memory. A simpler example is to think of an iPod. The capacity is measured in gigabytes, because they are larger than kilobytes. If iPod capacity was measured in kilobytes, you wouldn't have simple numbers like 8/16/24GB, they would be huge (An 8GB iPod would be called a 8388608K). So basically, kilobytes are a measurement of data space, just like gigabytes. 1GB (Gigabyte) = 1048576K (Kilobytes) I hope I answered your question :); i'm a C++/Web programmer.
google.com would probably have one their website.
true
Twitter is another famous website. Friendfeed is another website.
no , you would just probably get fired
There is no universal limit to the size of emails. A common limit is 25 megabytes. So virtually any ISP will permit 100 kilobytes