1 MB (megabyte) may either refer to exactly a million bytes, or a bit more, depending on the definition used.
Almost 1 Megabyte. 1 Megabyte is a unit of computer memory or data storage capacity, equal to 1,048,576 (220) bytes.
One million bytes are approximately equal to 1 Mb (megabyte) according to SI-prefixes.
Yes. The standard definition is now 10^6 bytes. Historically, it could have represented 1,048,576 bytes (2^20 bytes), a value now defined as a mebibyte (million-binary byte).
With the metric system, one million is described by the prefix Mega (capital M). One million bytes (b) would be a Megabyte or Mb.
A unit of information equal to 220 bytes or loosly, one million bytes
To get a pretty much correct answer, multiply the KB by one million. (There are about one million KB in one GB).
1024 Bytes = 1 Kilobyte 1024 Kilobytes = 1 Megabyte 1 Megabyte = 10242 Bytes= 1,048,576 Bytes
Two hundred million bytes can be expressed as 200 megabytes (MB), since one megabyte is equal to one million bytes. Alternatively, it can also be represented as 0.2 gigabytes (GB), given that one gigabyte is equal to one billion bytes. In binary terms, it would be approximately 191.01 mebibytes (MiB), as one mebibyte equals 1,048,576 bytes.
It is roughly one million bytes.
A megabyte is one million bytes, each byte being a sequence of 8 bits, which is enough information to represent one character of alphanumeric data.
A "block" is a sizeable unit of computer data. In contrast to the conventional sector (which is set at 512 bytes), a block can be smaller or bigger (it can be equivalent to one or more units of at least one sector, called a cluster).
1,099,511,627,776 bytes. One trillion ninety-nine million five hundred eleven million six hundred twenty-seven thousand seven hundred seventy-six bytes.