There is no universal limit to the size of emails. A common limit is 25 megabytes. So virtually any ISP will permit 100 kilobytes
true
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.
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.
it is around 450mb (less that .5 GB)
111 kilobytes = 0.108398438 megabytes so 111KB are approximately a tenth of 1MB
Yes, a kilobyte is less than a megabyte. A kilobyte is equal to 1,024 bytes, while a megabyte is equal to 1,024 kilobytes.
it is a bit less than a normal sized picture
A less tender friend isn't as kind or "sweet" as another friend. If they're your friend, like them for who they are, not if they are sweet or not. Just because you're less tender than someone else doesn't mean you're mean.
of course NOT!! hugging is great no matter the gender, if there were more hugs in the world there would be less war!!!!
Simply talk to your husband about it. If he doesn't agree with you I would talk to your husbands friend. And don't kick him out if you know he has no where to go. We don't need another home less guy! And if they agree with you try to help your husbands friend find a house.
5 kilobits per second is 5000 bits per second. This means 0.625 kilobytes per second. Consider that a slow broadband connection is at least 62 kilobytes per second. You are downloading at roughly 1/100th the speed you should be.
It means just a normal friend. Nothing more nothing less