There are 9.313225746154785e-10 (or 9.313225746154785^-10) millibyte in 1 byte.
There is no such thing as a "milobyte," However, if you mean "megabyte", there are 1000 kilobytes in a megabyte. A kilobyte is 1000 bytes. A megabyte is 1 million bytes.
That would be 1/1000 of a byte, but it doesn't really make sense. The smallest unit of information is that is of any practical use is the bit, which distinguishes one of two states, for example, "0" or "1". The byte is usually understood to be 8 bits. 1/1000 of a byte, that is, 1/125 of a bit, doesn't make much sense.
KB is kilobyte 1 thousand bytesMB is megabyte 1 million bytes
1073741824 bytes or 10243 bytes or 230 bytes
1024 bytes
There is no such thing as a "millibyte". It's called a megabyte and there is 1024 megabyte(mb) in a gigabyte. Using based binary sizes, not decimal (which is what the boxes for HDs and such use). 1 Gigabyte = 1,073,741,824 bytes 1 Millibyte = 0.0009765625 = 1/1024 = 2^-10 bytes c/o http://tilansia.com/sizechart.html So 1GB/1mB tells you there are 1,099,511,627,776 mB in 1GB.
536870912 Bytes
1024 bytes
how many bytes are needed to structure PCB Also explain different purposes of these bytes
125000 bytes Wrong. 1MB has 1048576 bytes.
128 megabytes equals 134,217,728 bytes.
100 bytes