Storing files on the disc will not cause it to weigh more.The information stored on a hard disk drive is encoded as magnetic fields on a rigid platter containing extremely small but discrete polarization areas. Therefore, the disk will always weigh exactly the same as it always did, regardless of how much information has been encoded onto it. Bits and bytes, in this instance, are without mass. Similarly, 20th century tape recorders stored voices, sounds, or data without making their tapes any heavier.
Buying a disc that has a larger capacity may mean that it is slightly heavier, if there are more components inside it. But there is not a simple relationship.
An 80 Gb drive will probably weigh about the same as a 40 Gb drive.
4,096 bytes is equal to 32,768 bits.
4 bit equals to nibble and 8 bit equal to byte..
1024 bits.
4 bits is equal to 50 cents the old college cheer was 2 bits- 4bits -6 bits a dollar if you can't hear us we'll shout a little louder
4 Gigabytes (Gb) is equal to 4,194,000 Kilobytes (Kb), so at a page size of 4.2 Kilobytes (Kb), a 4 Gigabyte (Gb) flash drive can hold about 998,571 pages.
address space=24bits => (2 Power 24)=16M words
12 Bits
640 Kilobyte is equal to 5243000 bits (1 KB = 8192 bits)
No. The "byte" is much larger: A "byte" consists of 8 "bits". 4 bytes would equal 32 bits (4 x 8)
8 bits
Bits are way measuring data. Eight bits equal one byte. One thousand bytes equal one kilobyte. One thousand kilobytes equal one megabyte and so on.
bits of space craft remains and it comes from earth