That depends a lot on how much you pay per KB or MB.600 KB is about 0.6 MB; check how much you pay per MB.
um, a lot more. a GB is either 1000 (10^3) MB or 1024 (2^10) MB. so 5 GB would be 5000 MB, which is a lot more than 44.791 MB.
Not much. To put it simply, one song is an average size of 5 MB or so, and you have 1 MB to work with. More specifically, one megabyte is the equivalent of 1048576 bytes.
1 GB is a bit more than one thousand MB (It's 1024 exactly). So 50GB is about 50,000 MB. If your total usage is only 100MB so far, than your current usage is100/50,000= 0.2% or 1/500th of your total allowed Internet usage. So the answer to your question is no.
Approximate usage is 40-50 mb/h of playtime
When you say "browse the internet", that sounds to us a lot like something that T-Mobile might interpret as "internet usage", and add to your tab.
It is important to know the megabyte usage of the T1 Line company. The company also uses a lot of electricity so it is dangerous if you try and meddle with their products.
'His mobile data usage was 250 megabytes this month.' 'His usage of the back-door was allowed due to his employment at the shop.'
I would say that 5 meg is just enough if you rarely go on the internet. If you are on the web alot, you are going to be wanting about 5-10GB.
5130 MB in GB
Not by today's standards. The average song file is at least 3 MB, so you could only put about 16 songs into 50 MB.
About a million. 1 GB = 1024 MB, and 1 MB = 1024 KB.