1 kB = 1,024 bytes. Therefore:
1.44MB = 1,474.56KB = 1,509,949.44Bytes Note that 1.44 is probably an approximation, since realistically bytes will not be divided into fractions.
It is the memory capacity of the storage unit.
Megabytes (Mb), Gigabytes (Gb) and Terabytes (Tb) are common words to describe computer storage. A pen-drive (USB device) could store as little as 32Mb of data - a typical DVD can store 4.7Gb, and modern hard-drives are being produced that can hold a 10Tb or more !
Yes. All cells with nuclei contain genetic information.
Eukaryote.
The term used to describe a little over a billion characters is "gigabyte" (GB), which is often used in the context of digital storage and data size. Specifically, one gigabyte is equivalent to approximately 1 billion bytes, and since characters are typically represented by bytes, a gigabyte can hold around a billion characters, depending on the encoding used.
KB = Kilo(1000)byte A KB of data can hold 2^10 =1024 Bytes of Information
It's a diskette, but then bigger, and it can hold 1 a 2 gb.
Approx 700MB, or 700,000,000 bytes.
1 billion bytes
A Sector.
capacity
1 MB (megabyte) = 1048576 bytes (2^20)
810,000
Exactly 0 bytes
when we're talking about DVD movies thinking in terms of how many bytes is pretty rediculous. a very short DVD quality movie will be measured at least in tens of mega-bytes (Mb). one megabyte is equal to 1,048,576 bytes. so, if you were, for instance, thinking in terms of how many bytes there were in a full-length DVD quality feature film then you would be talking about gigabytes(Gb). one Gb is equal to 1,073,741,824 bytes. you need between 1 and 3 gigs of space for a whole DVD worth of information.
A Music CD can hold up to 700Mbs, which equals to 700,000,000 bytes, aprox.
I would say a monoicosebyte which is an astonishing 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes. This unit of storage will most likely never come up due to how large this unit of measurement is for storage. I bet that there isn't even a single device on earth that can hold this many bytes.