The number of lines of text that can be read with 1GB of data depends on the length of each line. Assuming an average line of text contains about 100 characters, and considering that 1GB is approximately 1 billion bytes, you could fit around 10 million lines of text in 1GB. However, this is a rough estimate and can vary based on formatting and encoding.
To determine the number of address lines required for 1 GB of memory, we can use the formula (2^n = \text{Memory Size}), where (n) is the number of address lines. Since 1 GB equals (2^{30}) bytes, we need (30) address lines to uniquely address each byte in 1 GB of memory. Therefore, (30) address lines are required for 1 GB.
It depends on the content of the pages, but on average, 1 GB can hold about 500,000 to 1,000,000 pages of text documents.
1gb = 1024 mb.
1000kb = 1mb 1000mb = 1gb 1,000,000kb = 1gb
On a Flip Mino HD 1GB = 30min.
1GB = 1024 MB 1MB= 1024 KB So 1GB= 1048576 KB
1024mb (megabits) = 1gb (gigabits)
About 1000.
1024MB=1GB
2.
1024KB=1MB and 1024MB=1GB. Therefore, 1GB = 1048576KB.Hence 10129330/1048576 = 9.6600818634GB.
Depending on your numbering scheme, either 1024MB or 1000MB makes up 1GB.