750GB refers to a storage capacity of 750 gigabytes, which is a unit of digital information. One gigabyte is equivalent to approximately 1,024 megabytes, so 750GB can store a significant amount of data, such as thousands of photos, hours of video, or numerous applications. This measurement is commonly used for hard drives, solid-state drives, and other storage devices.
Mean is the average.
I didn't mean what I said. What does antidisestablishmentarianism mean? My sister is mean. I don't like being mean. The mean of a set of values is the average. The mean temperature is much lower in the valley in spring.
The population mean is the mean value of the entire population. Contrast this with sample mean, which is the mean value of a sample of the population.
If repeated samples are taken from a population, then they will not have the same mean each time. The mean itself will have some distribution. This will have the same mean as the population mean and the standard deviation of this statistic is the standard deviation of the mean.
The mean is the average
2tb
320-750gb
The number of photos that can fit into 750GB depends on the average file size of the photos. For example, if an average photo is around 5MB, then 750GB would hold approximately 150,000 photos (750,000MB ÷ 5MB per photo). If the average file size is larger or smaller, the total number of photos would adjust accordingly.
depending on the size of the movies, roughly 650-800 movies will fit on it.
Well first that must be a lot of many and Think of it this way, It will hold up to 1000 hours worth of video or about 200,000 songs or a combination of the two. i hope this helped
Yes: http://www.upgradecomputermemory.com/images/products/large/750gb-desktop-3-5-sata-hard-drive-dhd-s750.jpg
It means that it has both SSD drive in for caching and frequently used files and plate-based hard drive for all other files.
In 2011 the company Sea Gate made the first 4.0 TB hard drive but normally the hard drive is 750GB or 1.0 TB it depends how much you spend.
Western Digital Caviar Black WD7501AALS 750GB 7200 RPM 32MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" Hard Drive costs around $79.99 and has tons of space and its from a respectable company.
A 1TB drive has aprox. 1000GB of memory. So 1TB has 250GB more memory than any 750GB drive.
my specs are DELL Alienware M17x R3 Notebook Intel Core i7 2670QM(2.20GHz) 17.3" 8GB Memory DDR3 1333 750GB HDD 7200rpm DVD±R/RW AMD Radeon HD 6870M
I'm buying a 13in MacBook Pro, 8gb of RAM. It's for my son, and he needs it for school, and for gaming. He isn't much of a hardcore gamer, but I was wondering if I should get the 500GB Serial ATA Drive @ 5400 rpm version, or the 750GB Serial ATA Drive @ 5400 rpm [Add $100.00] version. Any suggestions?