Direct quote from Wikipedia: There are many unofficial or fabricated metric prefixes circulating the internet, especially for values smaller than 10-24 or larger than 1024. One well-known unofficial prefix is bronto-, used in the fake term brontobyte. References on the World Wide Web suggest meanings of the bronto prefix to be variously any of 1015, 1021, 1024, or 1027. SI has already produced standard prefixes for 1015 (peta), 1021 (zetta) and 1024 (yotta).
A terabyte is 10^12 bytes.
After brontobyte there is nisabyte/geobyte (there are two names for it) and after that is zotzabyte.
11,264 gigabytes are in 11 terabytes.
One brontobyte is 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes. 1 followed by 27 zeros.
No such thing. The next unit up from terabyte is a petabyte, which is 1,000 terabytes.
The largest unit of information is typically considered to be a "brontobyte," which is equivalent to 10^27 bytes or 1,024 yottabytes. In the context of digital data, information is often measured in bytes, with larger units like kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes, terabytes, and so on, leading up to the brontobyte. However, brontobytes are mostly theoretical at this point, as current data storage and processing capabilities have not yet reached this scale in practical applications.
A brontobyte. Note - this isn't yet an official name, but is recognised by many.
0.0009765625 TB
10000 terabytes
1
a brontobyte or a geobyte
2~3 Terabytes worth.
0.337 TB