Haha, luckily there are no confusing conversions from 'metric' memory to 'U.S.' memory. A megabyte's a megabyte, no matter where you live.
In the metric system, "mega" is a prefix that denotes a factor of one million, represented by the symbol "M." For example, 1 megabyte is equal to 1 million bytes, and 1 megawatt is equal to 1 million watts.
The metric unit to record data are bytes. There are 1024 bytes in a kilobyte, 1024 kilobytes in a megabyte, etc.
If you mean the American trillion - a 1, followed by 12 zeroes - the prefix is tera.
You are a bit confused here. There is no such thing as 1 metric. Metric is the name of the system of measurement that is a decimalised system of measurement. 1Kilometre = 1000metres 1 Kilogram = 1000 grams 1 Square metre = 1000cubic decimetres etc
A quart is a measure of volume, not weight. A liter would be the metric equivalent of a quart in terms of volume. If it's weight you're looking for, the basic unit of mass in the metric system is the gram.
All of the above. I forget the exact amount, but a couple of bytes equals a kilobyte, a couple of kilobytes equals a megabyte, a couple of megabytes equals a gigabyte, and a couple of gigabytes equals a terabytes. You can even go further by saying a couple of terabytes equals an exobyte.
Two gigabytes are equal to: * 2048 megabytes, when using the binary number system * 2000 megabytes, when using the decimal number system2 gigabytes, using the metric index conversion as per the recommendation of the IEC, is equal to 2000 megabytes. However, the use of metric index conversions is still ambiguous, and may refer to 2048 megabytes in certain instances.
1 megabyte (MB) is calculated as 2 raised to the power of 20, which equals 1,048,576 bytes. This is based on the binary system, where 1 kilobyte (KB) equals 1,024 bytes (2^10). Therefore, 1 MB equals 1,024 KB, and since each KB is 1,024 bytes, multiplying 1,024 by 1,024 gives you 1,048,576 bytes.
With the metric system, one million is described by the prefix Mega (capital M). One million bytes (b) would be a Megabyte or Mb.
In the metric system, "mega" is a prefix that denotes a factor of one million, represented by the symbol "M." For example, 1 megabyte is equal to 1 million bytes, and 1 megawatt is equal to 1 million watts.
Popular terms in decreasing size: mb (megabyte), kb (kilobyte), byte. Just follow the standard metric system here. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_system
A megabyte.
1 GB equals 1,024 Megabytes
1 GB equals to 1024 MB.
There are 1,024 megabytes (MB) in a gigabyte (GB). This is based on the binary system used in computing, where 1 GB equals 1,024 MB. However, in some contexts, especially in storage device marketing, 1 GB is often considered to be 1,000 MB, following the decimal system.
There is only 1 metric system - a German litre equals an English litre.
There are 1,024 megabytes in a gigabyte. This is based on the binary system used in computing, where each increment is a power of two. Therefore, 1 gigabyte equals 1,024 megabytes.