In both physics and computing, 'kilo' is a prefix meaning 'thousand', so it has the same value in both fields. In physics, it may be used with 'meter', 'gram', 'watt', 'pascal', 'pound' etc. In computing, it is almost always used with 'bit' or 'byte'.
When you're dealing with math, physics, or really anything where numbers are involved, 'kilo-' usually means '1,000'. So 16 kilo = 16,000
They are equal weight.
it is obviously the same weight because it say KILO for both!
A kilo
1 kilo
It depends largely on what it's a kilo of--a kilo of brick dust is much less expensive than a kilo of steel, which is less expensive than a kilo of uranium.
Kilo is an abbreviation for kilogram. Therefore, the correct plural of kilo is kilograms.
A kilo is equal to 1000 grams.
6 Oranges in a kilo
The prefix kilo- means 1000.
A kilo
A KILO-gram