Kilobyte, or KB.
Songs come in many different shapes and sizes. It all depends on the file format and the bitrate. I'm going to make a lot of assumptions here. I'll assume you're asking about the MP3 file format at a constant (as opposed to variable, which is impossible to calculate for your question) bitrate of 128 kilobits/sec(kbps). Depending on who you ask, 1 kb=1024 b or 1 kb=1000 b. In this case, it's the latter. Also keep in mind, there is added overhead in almost any music format. This overhead contains information about the file, but the added amount of size is almost negligible, especially when you talk about longer songs or songs at a higher bitrate. With the above assumptions in mind, a 1 minute song would be about 940 kB. This remains pretty linear. A 2 minute song would be 1880 kB. A 3 minute song would be 2820. A song of x minutes in length would be x * 940 kB. To get it in MB, just divide by 1024. Keep in mind, this only holds true for songs encoded at 128 kbps. At a higher or lower bitrate, you'll need to tweak the formula included below. For any math geniuses out there, that's: [time in secs] * [bitrate in kbps] * [1000 b / 1 kb] * [1 B / 8 b] * [1 kB / 1024 B] * [1 MB / 1024 kB] = Size in MB Simplified: [bitrate in kbps] * 7500 / 1048576 [128] * 7500 / 1048576 = .92 MB + [overhead for the MP3 format]. That's about 940 kB / minute
1 kb = 1024 b.
Bits are the smallest unit of measurement of computer data. 8 bits (b) = 1 byte(B). 1024 bytes(B) = 1 kilobyte (kB). 1024 kB = 1 megabyte (MB) etc..
Yes. Here is the table of B, kB, mB, gB and tB... 1,000 B's fit into 1 kB. 1,000 kB's fit into 1 mB. 1,000 mB's fit into 1 gB. and last but not least, 1,000 gB's fit into 1 tB.
These are computer measurements of the size of a folder, file, hard drive, etc.A bit is a binary digit.A byte is 8 bits.A kilobyte (kB) is 1,000 bytes.A megabyte (MB) is 1,000,000 bytes.It also makes a difference if the "B" is in capital or small letters.A capitalized B means bytes, a small b means bits, so MB = megabytes and Mb = megabits.
2 GB = 2,097,152 KilobyteByte = the amount of computer memory stored in one ASCII character.Example:the letter A=1 byte andthe word INTERNET=8 bytesthe phrase INTERCAPE ONLINE=16 bytesByte = BKilobyte = K or KBMegabyte = M or MBGigabyte = G or GB or GigHere is a conversion chart to show you how they all work together (exact calculations are shown in the parenthesis) 8 bits = 1 B 1,000 B(1,024 B) 1 KB 10,000 B 10 KB 100,000 B 100 KB 1,000,000 B(1,048,576 B) 1,000 KB 1 MB 10,000,000 B10,000 KB 10 MB 100,000,000 B 100,000 KB 100 MB 1,000,000,000 B(1,073,741,824 B) 1,000,000 KB 1,000 MB 1 G 1,000,000,000,000 B 1,000,000,000 KB 1,000,000 MB1,000 G 1 TerabyteComputer memory (RAM), storage space, and application and document sizes are measured in KBs or MBs
It really depends on weather you're asking a manufacturer or a computer.MP3 manufacturers use 1gb = 1,000,000,000 bytes.Computers use 1GB = 1024MB = 1048576 KB=1073741824 bytes.So to answer your question, it is either 1500 MB and 1,500,000 KB or 1,536MB and 1,572,864KB
b -> kb = 1024 kb -> mb = 1024 mb -> gb = 1024 gb -> tb = 1024
1 GB = 1,024 MB = 1,048,576 KB = 1,073,741,824 B = 8,589,934,592 b GB = GigaBytes MB = MegaBytes KB = KiloBytes B = Bytes (a set of 8 bits) b = bits (an individual 1 or 0)
626 KB is a rather small filesize. It is the equivalent of about 1 picture. 1,024 KB is one megabyte (1MB). A song is typically 3 to 8 MB, or 3,000 to 8,000 KB. Most desktop harddrives today are between 120,000 MB to as much as 1,500,000 MB. Laptops are typically 40,000 to 250,000 MB. 626 KB is such a tiny amount that it's often considered 'negligible'. Or so small it makes no difference. What is listed below is technically correct for BYTES. However a Byte is 8 bits, a a bit (abbreviated as a lower-case 'b' or just 'bit') is the smallest unit of measurement in a computer. Most modern computers however use a filesystem that limits the smallest size of a unit to 512 bytes. So a 1 byte or 1 bit file will both be 512 bytes. This is called a 'cluster'. A cluster may be as large at 64 KB as well. However, for a 626 KB filesize, this is largely irrelevent as it would easily use the clusters efficiently. However having a very large number of files smaller than 512 bytes may waste a lot of space. IE, you could have 100,000 files that are all 1 byte in real size, but they take up a 512 byte size each. Making what would be 100 KB actually take up 51,200,000 KB. Older computers, SD cards, thumb drives, and other USB and flash drives use FAT and FAT32 filesystems, and suffer less of this problem (they can have clusters as small as 32 bytes) Either way though, a single 626 KB file is very, very tiny. It's the eauivalent of just under 1/2 of a floppy drive, or 1/1000th of a CD. Also, TB (Terabyte) is not the largest unit. While very rare to see in a consumer (home user's) computer, there also exist PB (Petabytes), and even EB (Exabytes). Some supercomputer clusters, such as Google, have systems with an EB of storage or more. But there are, at most, a dozen such systems on earth as of this moment (7/31/2010) OLD: no, B is the smallest computer unit, KB is the 2nd smallest, MB is the 3rd smallest, GB is the 4th smallest, TB is the highest computer unit. The question is in reference to 626Kb however. The lower case 'b' is commonly used to refer to a bit, with is one eight of a byte. The discussion above refers to bytes, commonly abbreviated with a capital B. Thus, 626Kb are 626/8 KB = 78.25 KB. Since each kilobyte ('K') is 1024 bytes, 626 Kb therefore are 80128 bytes. By modern standards, this is a rather small file size, but size is of course relative to the space available. Some specialized computers have very little storage, and would struggle to accommodate this amount. Other computers, including modern PCs and similar devices, can easily cope with data of this size.
2621440000 B or 2621440 KB
A MB (MegaByte) equals 1048576 bytes (B) or 1024 KiloBytes (KB). or 0,00098 GigaByte (GB). So 120 MB = 125829120 B or 122880 KB or 0.11719 GB