it would be 2mb due to compression programs.
If it is assumed that when referring to 8 Mb throughput a speed of 8 Mb/s is being achieved, the answer can be calculated by dividing the size of the file by the download speed. In this case, a 440 Mb file can be downloaded in 55 seconds.
1 byte 10 bytes 100 bytes 1000 bytes = 1 mb
no not really, its just under a gigabyte which pretty much every computer thee days can handle no sweat, if ure downloading it from the net and you have limite bandwith, it will use up a chunk of that, and if ure on dial-up you be there for days downloading it lol, hope this has helped, im no computer geek but thought i cld help nath 99.66 MB is nowhere close to 1 GB. 1 GB = 1024 MB so he would have 924.34 MB left to reach 1 GB.
First, if you are using a computer that uses MB, go spend $100 on a used computer and you'll have something that has at least 1GB. As for your question, the amount of ram you have installed in a computer is not the only memory a computer can use. The actual name depends on the OS, but all computers have a section of the hard drive set asside to act as RAM. On a Windows PC it's called a Page File. The advantage is that you can use more ram then your computer has. The disadvantage is that it requires your computer to read, write, and rewrite this section of the drive over and over, which can be hard on the hard drive, and cause it to fail more quickly.
1GB is equal to 1024MB so 4.7GB will be equal to 4.7*1024 = 4812.8MB
A file of 640 seconds would take 640 seconds or 10 minutes 40 seconds. If the question was a file of 640 MB at 100 Mb per second, then the file would take 51.2 seconds (640 MB = 5120 Mb / 100 Mb = 51.2)
Right mouse click on dll file, click convert to, click options, click mib, click apply.
Current spreadsheet size is 165MB, no problems yet and includes extensive code/macros and colors.
megabytes mb
Yes it is.
No, Just because the B is capitalized does not mean that it is a Larger quantity of space. 100 MegaBytes = 100 Megabytes.
That would be two hundred Megabytes. Likely storage, or a file or many files on a hard drive is what you're referring to. Any number of programs or files could take 200 mb. I would need more details.
8.09
Of course, this all depends on: 1) How compressed the file is (Bitrate) 2) How long the song is (Seconds) 3) Compression codec used 4) Ultimately, this translates to what is the average file size (in MB) of the songs. So... there are 1024 MB in a GB, so 1024 * 160 MB in 160 GB or 163,840 MB in 160 GB. If the songs are of an average file size of 4 MB then 160 GB would store 40,960 songs.
If the file is not an .exe file and less than 25mb you can send it as gmail. The file larger than 25 MB need to be splitted by file splitter( such as jihosoft big file sender) and then send via gmail.
not much a few MB maybe
On the disk it is not a compressed file... like if i were to send someone a file and it was 40 megabytes, i could compress the folder down to 20 megabytes using winrar, it will compress any file/ folder for you... they are mostly used as zip files or folders.