32 millionth of a second
5 seconds
The audio recording time for 32 kilobytes (KB) depends on the audio format and bitrate. For instance, at a common bitrate of 128 kbps (kilobits per second), 32 KB would provide approximately 2 seconds of audio. At lower bitrates, such as 64 kbps, the recording time could extend to around 4 seconds. To calculate accurately, divide the file size in bits (32 KB = 256 kilobits) by the bitrate.
A kilobyte (KB) is equal to 1,024 bytes. A megabyte (MB) is 1,024 kilobytes. So there are 1,024 KB * 256 = 262,144 KB in 256 MB
A 256 kbps MP3 stream uses 256 kilobits per second. To convert this to megabytes per minute, first convert kilobits to megabytes: 256 kbps is 256/8 = 32 kilobytes per second. Then, multiply by 60 seconds to find the per-minute rate: 32 KB/s × 60 = 1920 kilobytes per minute, which is approximately 1.88 megabytes per minute.
A SIM card (subscriber identity module) is similar to an EPROM (erasable-programmable ROM), with anywhere between 8 KB to 256 KB of storage capacity.
Yeah I think it's plenty. You will see that each game has a certain amount of KB that it needs for saving. For example: Madden 12 requires 3,872 Kb of space. Gran Turismo requires only 256 KB of space. That's a total of 4,128 KB of space. 4GB is 4,194,304 KB of space. That's hardly a dent in the total amount of KB with the 4GB card.
256 kilobytes (KB) is equivalent to 256,000 bytes. In more familiar terms, this amount of data can hold approximately 256 pages of plain text, 128 high-resolution images, or about 30 seconds of uncompressed audio. It’s a small quantity of data by today’s standards, often used for simple text files or small images.
* Tualatin - 0.13 µm process technology ** Introduced July 2001 ** Number of transistors 28.1 million ** 32 KB L1 cache ** 256 KB or 512 KB Advanced Transfer L2 cache (Integrated) ** 370-pin FC-PGA2 (Flip-chip pin grid array) package ** 133 MHz system bus speed ** Socket 370 ** Family 6 model 11 ** Variants *** 1133 MHz (256 KB L2) *** 1133 MHz (512 KB L2) *** 1200 MHz *** 1266 MHz (512 KB L2) *** 1333 MHz *** 1400 MHz (512 KB L2)
this is because of your processor, it works with binary digits which can only have results like the numbers below: 1 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512 1024 in binary the number 20 would be for example 001010000 Another answer could be, 1MB is equal to 1024KB, a different amount of KB. I learnt this a few minutes or seconds ago.
1000 kb is rounded down because in all technicality 1024 kb is really a megabyte, not 1000 kb.
64 feet per second.
It is 256 pages long.