No, it is not. There are 1000 megabytes per gigabyte; so 10 megabytes is only 0.01 gigabyte, much less than 2 gigabytes.
1,000,000 minutes is equal to: 16,666 hours and 40 minutes Or 694 days, 10 hours, and 40 minutes Or 23 months, 4 days, 10 hours and 40 minutes (assuming 30 days per month) Or 1 year, 11 months, 4 days, 10 hours and 40 minutes (assuming 30 days per month, and assuming 365 days in a year)
10 percent interest per month any bank name
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50 W * (1 kW/1000 W) * (10 hr/day) = 0.5 kW-hr/dayAssuming 30 days/mo.--> 0.5 kw-hr/day*(30 day/month) = 15 kW-hr/month
The current data plans are $50 per month for 5GB and each additional GB is $10. You are basically paying $10/GB a month with a minimum of 5 each month.
No, it is not. There are 1000 megabytes per gigabyte; so 10 megabytes is only 0.01 gigabyte, much less than 2 gigabytes.
usual price depends on capacity and format but usually runs between 10 and 20 cents per gigabyte.
sir i wnat this meaning another wordsAbove rate is applicable for 10 hours per day, 260 hours per month.
1024 megabytes make 1 gigabyte. To answer your question, 10240 megabytes make 10 gigabytes in normal computer systems. But when talking about internet data, 1000MB per 1GB is the norm, this is to simplify data cost calculations and because the 8 bits per 1 byte system does not apply
Using the average audio rate (128k per second), 10 minutes takes up a mere 10 megabytes, or a scarce 100th of a gigabyte. Remeber: It is usually 1 minute for 1 megabyte.
it can hold about 5-10 hours depending on video resolution.
Depends if you dealing with Music or Video, and it depends on the quality. In theory you could have 1 minute of video equal to 4.7GB, 10 hours, or more.
Heres how you calculate required bandwidth: If 100 people want to download a 15 MB file from your server then: 100 people * 15 MB = 1,500 MB = 1.5 GB (1GB=1000MB) So you need 1.5 GB downstream bandwidth. If you expect 100 people per day to download the file, then for a 31-day month, you'll need 45 GB downstream bandwidth, since bandwidth is usually advertised as the number of GB per month. So if you have 15 people that want to download a 2MB image and 10 people that want to download a 3MB sound file, then: (15 people * 2 MB) + (10 people * 3 MB) = 60 MB = .06 GB -DJ Craig
"GB" is not a connection speed. Connection speeds, or more precisely bandwidth, are expressed in bps (bits per second), or some multiple thereof.
A good rule of thumb to apply is 10 GB can record about 45 minutes of video; therefore, 20 GB - 1.5 hours, 40 GB - 3 hours, 80 GB - 6 hours, 120 GB - 9 hours, etc. This, however, is just an estimate. You will definitely get more or less depending on the quality of video. Low or poor quality will give you more time, but high or excellent clarity will, of course, give you less time.
The OS itself will typically use about 10 GB or so of space. We'll round down a bit. 300 GB is enough for approximately 461 hours of audio music (1,199 if MP3 music) Or about 64 hours of DVD video