Depends on how big the hard drive is. These days, 1MB is nothing compared to 80GB+ hard drives in new computers.
When you say "browse the internet", that sounds to us a lot like something that T-Mobile might interpret as "internet usage", and add to your tab.
it depends on how many episodes in the season and also whether it is in High definition, it's very variable
Core duo or better Ram 2 GB or better 3rd card 512 MB or 9500 N vidia Hard disk space 20 GB Keyboard and Mouse
Cost of computer depends upon internal hardware used inside.a computer which has 4 GB ram 1 TB hard disk and 3.0 Ghz operating frequency is very costlier than 512 MB ram 80 GB hard disk and 1.5 Ghz speed . so mean is that it depends upon internal hardware.
No 56kb is like 0.056 MB 700 MB > 0.056 MB
Most programs used on your computer take up several megabytes of space on your hard drive.
Well 500 Megabytes(MB) is roughly half of one Gigabyte(GB). so depending on how much space your computer hard drive holds will determine your definition of "a lot".this is the official measurement posted by Google....1 gigabyte = 1024 megabytes .Most modern domestic computers have hundreds of gigabytes of memory - in that context 500 MB is not a lot.
a whole lot of space.
if you think that is a lot of space then it is but if you don't then it's not sowhat do you think?is it or not?to me it is but it might not be big to other people?that is your opinion
CPU GHz RAM size (usually MB or GB) Hard Drive Space (MB or GB again) Video Memory (MB or GB)
Megabytes is used in the world of computing to describe disk space, data storage space or system memory. Megabytes can be used for many different things but it is most often used to describe storage or disk space in a computer world.
yes, some may even use gigabytes, because the online game, needs to store it's cache into your computer, thus taking up 'space', or memory.
The two cannot be compared. Hours is a measure of time where as megabytes is a measure of disk space (on a computer).
[This answer assumes the asker meant to say "difference between MB and GB")] A MB, or megabyte is 106 (1,000,000) bytes of space. A GB, or gigabyte is 109 (1,000,000,000) bytes of space. Unfortunately most computer operating systems and software (including Windows) incorrectly refer to MB and GB when they mean MiB and GiB leading to a public confusing of the true meaning of GB and MB. A MiB, or Mebibyte is 220 (1,048,576) bytes of space. A GiB, or Gibibyte is 230 (1,073,741,824) bytes of space. In either case the difference is that a GB is approximately one thousand times as large as a MB.
It takes about -- 9.83 MB (10,318,162 bytes) At least that's what my computer says.
It used to be. 1359MB is only a little more than 1 gigabytes. That's not a lot in today's term.
It means that your disk is getting full. You need to delete something, hopefully, something you aren't using. Perhaps you could even load some of your files to CD. You can also buy an external hard drive, go to eBay and search it, you'll find them. One of those will add a lot of space to store stuff on