Yes, terabytes can be held in a PC, as modern computers often support multiple storage drives, including hard disk drives (HDDs) and solid-state drives (SSDs) that can each hold several terabytes of data. Many consumer-grade SSDs and HDDs are available in capacities ranging from 1TB to 18TB or more. Additionally, external storage options and network-attached storage (NAS) systems can further expand a PC's total data capacity beyond the internal drives.
18 terabytes
1,500,000 more or less.
For PC, a gigabye, For mainframes, terabytes,
Terabytes is the correct spelling.
2.5 petabytes, which is equal to 2500 terabytes, which is also equal to 2.5e+15 bytes
That's determined by the manufacturer. These days, a "small" hard drive is 160 GB, while a large one may be 2 terabytes; 2048 gigabytes. Within a few years, there will be petabyte drives available; 1024 terabytes!
Petabyte. Petabyte = 1,000 Terabytes.
11,264 gigabytes are in 11 terabytes.
Petabyte (1,000 terabytes;) then exabyte (1,000,000 terabytes.)
No such thing. The next unit up from terabyte is a petabyte, which is 1,000 terabytes.
dell
It is neither.