One Sector on storage media constitutes of 512 Bytes.
13 Gibibytes is 13,958,643,712 bytes 13 Gigabytes is 13,000,000,000 bytes (13 billion) Gibibytes refer to the binary representation (1024MB per GB) and Gigabytes is the simpler method (1000MB per GB)
There are 1,048,576 kilobytes per gigabyte.Note: a kilobyte is 1,024 bytes, a megabyte is 1,024 kilobytes and a gigabyte is 1,024 megabytes.
There are 1,048,576 kilobytes per gigabyte.Note: a kilobyte is 1,024 bytes, a megabyte is 1,024 kilobytes and a gigabyte is 1,024 megabytes.
To calculate bytes per track on a storage medium, you need to know the number of sectors per track and the size of each sector. The formula is: Bytes per Track = Sectors per Track × Bytes per Sector. For example, if there are 63 sectors per track and each sector is 512 bytes, then the bytes per track would be 63 × 512 = 32,256 bytes.
Bytes are collections of 8 bits stored in digital logic or other computer components (hard-drives, DVDs, CDs). One gigabyte (GB) is 2 to the power 30 bytes. Thus, one gigabyte is 1073741824 bytes, or 1048576 kilobytes (kB), or 1024 megabytes (MB). One kB is 2 to the power 10 bytes. One MB is 2 to the power 20 bytes. Hertz (Hz) is the measurement unit for frequency. One Hz means one cycle per second. One MHz is one million cycles per second. For example, the clock signal in digital logic can be of 4 MHz, which means that there are 4 million cycles (periods) of the clock signal per second. Thus, there is no relationship between MHz and GB. The question is posed incorrectly.
To calculate the storage capacity, first find the total number of sectors on the disk pack: (4 \text{ plates} \times 2 \text{ surfaces per plate} = 8 \text{ surfaces}). Then, multiply the number of sectors per surface by the number of tracks and sectors: (8 \text{ surfaces} \times 1024 \text{ tracks/surface} \times 200 \text{ sectors/track} = 1,638,400 \text{ sectors}). Finally, multiply the total number of sectors by the sector capacity: (1,638,400 \text{ sectors} \times 1024 \text{ bytes/sector} = 1,677,721,600 \text{ bytes}), which equals approximately 1.56 GB.
Certainly, the question poster meant 5,000,000 -- or 5 MB -- per song. One gigabyte (1GB) = 1,000 MB. So, 1000MB/5MB = 200 tunes. If the question writer really means 5,000 bytes (5KB) per song, well, then you can store 200,000 tunes!
The two terms apply to entirely different things. Gigahertz is a measure of speed, 1 gigahertz = 1 billion CPU clock cycles per second, a gigabyte is storage space and is equal to a billion bytes
There are 1,000 megabytes in one gigabyte. (Some would like to say 1,024 megabytes to a gigabyte.)
GB (gigabytes) is bigger than MB (megabytes).1 kilobyte (KB) = 1024 bytes.1 megabyte (MB) = 1024 kilobytes.1 gigabyte (GB) = 1024 megabytes.1 terabyte (TB) = 1024 gigabytes.
Sectors (the smallest physical storage unit on a disk) is almost always 512 bytes (or 0.5 kb) in size.
You have to estimate, because it would be impossible to tell exactly how many songs have been written, but if you roughly estimate 1000 songs have been written per day every day in the world for the last say 200 years (its probably a lot more) then:1000*365*200= 73,000,000 (73 million) songsIf you estimate the total using MP3's (roughly 4 million bytes or 4MB) you get(4,000,000)*(73,000,000) = 292,000,000,000,000 (292 trillion bytes or 292TB)or292,000 GB