2 manufacturers gigabites (gb)
2000MB
Around 2000mb.
2 gb
Yes. 2GB is 2000MB (approximately) so 701MB will fit on it with 1299MB to spare.
The term "2000MB" refers to a data size of 2000 megabytes. A megabyte (MB) is a unit of digital information storage equal to approximately one million bytes. This measurement is commonly used to quantify storage capacity in devices like hard drives, USB flash drives, and memory cards, as well as to describe data transfer limits in internet plans.
2048MB, mathematically. But if you're buying a disk that is labeled 2GB, it will be fewer than 2000MB.
It depends on the type of file. One song is about 4MB and there are about 2000MB on a 2GB MicroSD card. Divide 2000 by 4 and you get 500 songs.
There are 2000mb in 2gb. Let's say an average song is 4mb. The ipod could hold 500 songs. Then, if an average album has 12 songs. Your ipod could hold about 40 albums.
1) Get a suitable and reliable graphics card, preferably not ATI. 2) Get a computer with at least 2000MB RAM. 3) Preferably, get a Quad core computer, whether it be Intel or AMD. If that is too expensive however, get a Dual Core processor. Those are the primary components you need for what you desire.
1GB=1024MB hence2GB=2048MB so 2000MB=1.953GB
It really depends on what quality and resolution settings you choose on the camera, when i went on holiday to Paris 3 weeks ago i took a 7.1 MP Samsung camera with a 2gb SD card in and turned all of the settings to the highest level (for editing purposes) Each photo took up between 2 and 3MB of memory. If 2gb = 2000MB i am sure you can work out the maths! Actually 2GB = 2048MB...
If you mean how much data is sent over the Internet to your Google Earth client when you're navigating the earth then it varies.The Google imagery database (used by Google Earth and Google Maps) including historical imagery and street view imagery has lots of data stored in Google's data center on many servers. Some estimates from Google in 2006 report that the "Google Earth database was 70.5 TB: 70 TB for the raw imagery and 500 GB for the index data."Note: 1 TB = 1024 Gigabytes.Fortunately only a small portion of the planet can be viewed at any time so you only download the data and layers for the view you're looking at. The first time to run Google Earth it will download 50-100Mb for the initial layers and imagery, which is saved in the cache.Google Earth, like your web browser, creates a disk and memory cache for downloaded content. The disk cache starts with default of 400MB up to 2000MB (2GB) depending on how much free space is available, but this value can be decreased. The memory cache starts with a default 256MB up to 500MB depending on amount of physical memory installed on the system.