The prefix 'micro' is a subdivision of a unit. It is one millionth of a given unit, however there is no such thing as a micro byte in computing.
8 bits - 1 byte 1024 Bytes - 1 Kilo Byte 1024 Kilo Bytes - 1 Mega Byte 1024 Mega Bytes - 1 Giga Bytes
Currently, commercial computers (sold at hardware stores to normal customers) mostly contain hard disk that have a capacity around 500 gb, for desktops, and 120gb for notebooks. The 500gb could sometimes even be 1TB for desktops IMPROVED: As of this response (7/21/2010) the largest HDDs in production are 1.5 TB for 3.5" and 4.5 TB for external/array packages. However technology is in prototype with up to 4.5 TB 3.5" available relatively soon (within a couple years). The largest memory modules in commercial production are 16 GB DDR2 sticks, though only 4GB sticks are common for end-users. The largest SSDs available are currently around the 500 GB mark, and rediculously expensive. The largest EEPROMs are 64 MB single-chip The largest SRAM caches are 8 MB single-chip The highest commercial density storage is Blu-Ray with 25 GB per layer (50 GB dual-layer), but with HVDs and PSDs on the way. The largest tape drive is an astounding 12 TB 14.5" tape from IBM The largest Flash single-chip module is 512 MB (of course much bigger can be made combining chips, as almost all flash devices do) Largest SD card is 64 GB Largest single-CPU cache combination structure is 12,928 KB Largest CPU register bank is 4096 bits Largest HDD buffer is 32 MB Largest sequential tape memory is 1 GB Largest video card is 8 GB And that's all I know for the moment. (Whew, that took some research!)
KB - Kilo Byte MB - Mega Byte GB - Giga Byte TB - Tera Byte while you may think kilo is 1000 and mega is 1 million... giga is 1 billion... and so on; it actually is not. a Kilo byte is actually 2^10 Byte which is 1024 Bytes. Kilo Byte = 2^10 Bytes = 1024 Bytes Mega Byte = 2^20 Bytes = 1048576 Bytes Giga Bytes = 2^ 30 Bytes = 1073741824 Bytes and so on... close enough right?
1 byte = 8 bits1 Kilo byte = 1024 bytes = 8192 bits1 Mega byte = 1024 Kilo Bytes = 1048576 bytes = 8388608 bits
1 byte 10 bytes 100 bytes 1000 bytes = 1 mb
There is no term for 8 bytes 8 bits = 1 byte 1024 bytes = 1 kilobyte
1 byte = 8 bits (4096 bytes) x (8 bits/byte) = 32768 bits
1 Byte = 1/1024th of a Kilobyte 1 Kilobyte = 1/1024th of a Gigabyte 1 Gigabyte = 1/1024th of a Terabyte
No. The "byte" is much larger: A "byte" consists of 8 "bits". 4 bytes would equal 32 bits (4 x 8)
In computers 1 kilo byte is 1024 bytes. But w usually say that 1 kilo byte is 1000 bytes and 1 MB is 1000000 bytes. Hence 305235 MB is 305235000000 bytes. If you want to be precise use the 1024 factor.
ok for 1 byte X 1000 503,000,000 Bytes For your Grand Total.
A byte is smaller than a megabyte.1 bit = one "on" or "off" in a binary computer or storage medium.1 byte = 8 bits.1 kilabyte = 1,000 bytes, or 8,000 bits.1 megabyte = 1,000,000 bytes.