No. Hz, stands for Hertz, which, in computer terminology, is the Central Processing Unit or CPU's clock speed or how many instruction cycles a processor can perform each second. Basically this tells you how fast your CPU is. A CPU with 900 megahertz or MHz, is faster than a CPU with 700 MHz. GB, stands for gigabyte, or how much internal storage is available on your computer. Gigabytes are used to store your programs, files, music, movies, and everything else you have on your computer. If you have a 500GB hard drive it can hold twice as much information as a 250GB hard drive. In short, hertz measure speed and gigabytes measure memory.
it is measured in GB gigabytes. also measured in newtons The memory is measured in MB's, and GB. If you purchase a stick of 128MB, you don't refer to it as a quarter of a gig, this is why it is measured in both.
There can be no equivalence. Hertz (Hz) is a measure of frequency (or reciprocal of time). A gigabyte (GB) is a measure of an amount of information. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at conversion from one to the other is fundamentally flawed.
8 GB and 8.00 GB are the same size.
58.8 Gigabytes is the same as 58,800 Megabytes
No. 1 gigabytes=1024 megabytes.
.08 Gigabytes is the same as 80 Megabytes.
there is no difference, they are the same.
No. 1 GB is twice as much as 512 MB.
Almost. The "G" in "GB" is the same "G". It stands for "giga", as in "gigantic". It's used in English to stand for a billion of something. In the case of "GB", it's a billion bytes. I hope that answers your question.
Gb, Ab, Bb, Cb (same as B), Db, Eb, F, Gb.
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.
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