1 mb= 1024 bytes
10 mb= 10240 bytes
100mb= 102400 bytes
I hope you meant that, if you meant something other, just say it.
A "B" is one byte.
A 16 B Flash drive has a storage capacity of 16 bytes, which is far smaller than a 5 MB MP3 file. Since 1 MB equals 1,024,000 bytes, a single 5 MB MP3 file equals approximately 5,120,000 bytes. Therefore, a 16 B Flash drive cannot store any 5 MB MP3 files, as its capacity is significantly less than the size of one file.
Bytes. (B = bytes. b = bits.)
2,000,000 Bytes ~ 2 megabytes 2,000,000 B ~ 2 MB
It completely depends the datatype that you have assigned for the variables 'a' , 'b' , and 'c'. Check the compiler that you are using for the size of the datatype in bytes. Add them and thus you will get the answer.
None.But there are 2048 bytes.
You can abbreviate "bytes" with a capital B. Try not to confuse this with a lowercase b, which is short for "bits".
1 EB = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 B = 1018 bytes = 1 billion gigabytes = 1 million terabytes.
B
I believe you have misread the file size of your mp3s. I have hundreds of songs on my computer, but not a single one is less than a million bytes. I also have an mp3 of a computer voice saying "It's 10 o'clock AM." That file is 11,500 bytes. In the interest of math I will temporarily disregard reality. There are 1024 bytes in a kilobyte, 1024 kilobytes in a megabyte, and 1024 megabytes in a gigabyte. Therefore the capacity of the player is 60 GB x 1024 MB/GB x 1024 kB/MB x 1024 B/kB, or 64,424,509,440 bytes. 64,424,509,440 bytes ÷ 400 bytes/song = 161,061,273.6 songs.
Megabytes (MB) are made up of 1,000,000 (1 million) bytes
Did you mean: 'How can bytes are in 2 GB?' If you did, the answer is: 2 Billion Bytes, which transforms into 2 Million Kilobytes, then 2000 MB, eventually reaching 2 GB. 1,000,000,000 B = 1,000,000 KB = 1000 MB = 1 GB 2,000,000,000 B = 2,000,000 KB, = 2000 MB = 2 GB