Well really it goes a bit, a byte, a kilobyte, a megabyte, a gigabyte, a terabyte, a petabyte, a exabyte, a zetta byte, a yotta byte, a bronto byte, then a geopbyte.
So theres two answers which are brontobyte and geopbyte.
You pronounce it as 'yot-ta-byte'
9.67140656 × 10 to the 24 power or this 9,671,406,560,000,000,000,000,000 wow
After terrabytes, you get:petabytesexabyteszettabytesyottabytesPussabytesHertzbytesTriaobytesNo more bytesEach one is 1024 times bigger than the previous unit.
bit- byte- kilo- mega- giga- tera- peta- exa- zetta- yotta-
Yotta is 10^24 Zetta is 10^21
Yotta Kasai is 6'.
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!)
Yotta Kasai was born on November 5, 1987, in Japan.
Its not tetra its terra. Its is a measurement in the powers of 10. as you know kilobyte means 1000 bytes A megabyte is a million bytes A giga byte is a billion bytes A terra byte is a trillion bytes then there are peta-, exa-, zetta- and lastly yotta- A yottabyte is: 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000, 000 bytes.
a byte is equal to0.0009765625 KB. Of course, KB is bigger than byte.
To add two 16-bit numbers and store the result in memory locations 90h (lower byte) and 91h (higher byte) on an 8051 microcontroller, you can use the following assembly code: MOV A, 30h ; Load lower byte of first number (example) ADD A, 31h ; Add lower byte of second number (example) MOV 90h, A ; Store lower byte result in memory location 90h MOV B, 30h ; Load higher byte of first number ADD B, 31h ; Add higher byte of second number MOV 91h, B ; Store higher byte result in memory location 91h Make sure to adjust the memory addresses and data values according to your specific requirements.
A megabyte is more than a kilobyte