OO naman...
bobo ang nagbabasa neto!!
It must be executing 10 billion operations per second, which means that its processor is running at 10 GHz, or it has multiple processors splitting the load between them.
The clue is in the question - in 1 billion seconds, there are 1 billion seconds!
A billion. LOL You are funny.
One cycle, in a computer, takes a time that is the reciprocal of the computer's clock rate - that which is expressed in MHz, or - more commonly nowadays - in GHz. Example: if your computer has a clock rate of 3 GHz, the time for a single cycle is (1 / 3 billion) seconds, i.e., 1/3 of a nanosecond, or 333 picoseconds.
1 billion seconds is 277,777.7778 hours.
1 billion seconds is 31years 251days22hours 39minutes28seconds
There are 432339120000000000 seconds in 13.7 billion years.
300 billion seconds is about 9,506.4 years.
15 seconds
15 seconds
15 seconds
15 seconds