A Xytohbyte. basically if you have one Xytohbyte of RAM your computer would be faster than A fat kid running after a flying burger,
Yes, C is row major when it comes to memory layout.
Diploma in Computer Science, Polytechnic comes in Under Graduate.
FLCL
A character that comes before a tab stop
it comes out sometime in may of 2009
After brontobyte there is nisabyte/geobyte (there are two names for it) and after that is zotzabyte.
One brontobyte is 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes. 1 followed by 27 zeros.
A geophyte comes after brontobyte when referring to storage options. One geophyte is equal to 1000 brontobytes in disk storage and 1024 brontobytes in virtual storage.
a brontobyte or a geobyte
a brontobyte or a geobyte
A brontobyte. Note - this isn't yet an official name, but is recognised by many.
1026 = 100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 That's certainly very helpful.
Direct quote from Wikipedia: There are many unofficial or fabricated metric prefixes circulating the internet, especially for values smaller than 10-24 or larger than 1024. One well-known unofficial prefix is bronto-, used in the fake term brontobyte. References on the World Wide Web suggest meanings of the bronto prefix to be variously any of 1015, 1021, 1024, or 1027. SI has already produced standard prefixes for 1015 (peta), 1021 (zetta) and 1024 (yotta).A terabyte is 10^12 bytes.
Well really it goes a bit, a byte, a kilobyte, a megabyte, a gigabyte, a terabyte, a petabyte, a exabyte, a zetta byte, a yotta byte, a bronto byte, then a geopbyte. So theres two answers which are brontobyte and geopbyte.
"Supply and demand" They've decided to base the price on how popular the song is. http://gizmodo.com/5185221/itunes-popular-songs-cost-more-money-pricing-goes-live-april-7 -Brontobyte
There is no larger official prefix than yottabyte (1024 bytes) or yobibytes (280 bytes).Several unofficial larger numbers have been suggested, such as the brontobyte (for either 1027 or 290) but the most likely pattern follows the Greek alphabet backwards, beginning with xonabytes (1027 and xobibytes (290 bytes). A popular alternative gaining support has been hellabytes.Given the current growth of computer data, the terms beyond yottabyte may become necessary as early as the year 2020.
There are technically 1,440,000 bytes that make up 1.44 megabytes. The floppy disk that used to be used to hold data for a computer was labeled as a 1.44 mb disk, although it actually held 1,474,560 bytes.