Estimating the storage capacity of human memory is challenging, but some scientists suggest it could be around 2.5 petabytes, or about 2.5 million megabytes. This estimate is based on the number of neurons and synaptic connections in the brain, which store information. However, human memory is not directly comparable to digital storage, as it involves complex processes of encoding, retrieval, and forgetting. Thus, the exact byte equivalence remains largely theoretical.
2147483648 bytes
4 bytes
A kilobyte (or a k) is 1024 bytes, so 16k is 16*1024 bytes or 16384 bytes.
Its the same. The unit for memory is bytes.
1024 mega bytes
Depends on how many bytes it has
4,096 In computer memory, "kilo" refers to 2 to the 10th power, or 1024, rather than to 1000.
To construct a RAM memory system of 2 bytes using 1288 RAM memory chips, first, determine the capacity of a single 1288 chip. Each 1288 chip typically has 128 bits (or 16 bytes). Therefore, to achieve 2 bytes, you would need 2 bytes / 16 bytes per chip = 0.125 chips. Since you cannot use a fraction of a chip, you would need at least 1 chip to construct the RAM memory system of 2 bytes.
A java.util.Date object will take about 32 bytes in memory.
2^16 locations or 65,536 bytes
In most languages with a null reference, it is simply a memory address to a zero-length memory block. So the only memory it would occupy in these cases would be enough for a memory pointer: usually around 4 bytes.
512 x 1024 bytes