A billion is a thousand-million. Metric Units: Deca - Ten Hecto - Hundred Kilo - Thousand Mega - Million Giga - Billion Tera - Trillion Many of the prefixes are uncommonly used. But, say, for example you had a billion grams (gigagram) and you wanted to convert it to megagrams, you would multiply it by 1000. So... one gigagram would be 1000 megagrams. Now, it gets a little more complicated when one talks about computers. Computers are based on factors of 2. 210 = 1024 which is the "standard" base for many computer calculations, especially those using metric prefixes. So, a kilobyte would be 1024 bytes. a megabyte is 1024 kilobytes, or 1024*1024 bytes = 1,048,576 bytes a gigabyte is 1024 megabytes, or 1024*1024*1024 bytes = 1,073,741,824 bytes. a terabyte is 1024 gigabytes, or 1024*1024*1024*1024 bytes = 1,099,511,627,776 bytes.
1024 bytes is binary counting while 1000 bites is decimal counting.
You don't do anything, they're the same thing.
87/10 IS a mixed fraction so you do not need to do anything to "convert" to a fractional notation.
You do not do anything. An improper fraction IS a real number.
Gigabytes and terabytes are forms of measurement. A terabyte is exactly 1024 gigabytes, so to convert gigabytes to terabytes, you simply divide the number of gigabytes by 1024.
Ya the answer is 100kb=102400 bytes and convert image resolution 796*597=100kb
anything is 1TB or more
8 btes equals 0.00781 Kilobytes
MB stands for Megabytes. To convert this to KB, multiply by 1024. To convert it to Bytes, multiply it by 1024 squared. To convert to GB, divide by 1024.
To convert bits per second (bps) to bytes per second (Bps), you divide by 8. For example, if you have 1000 bps, the equivalent in Bps would be 125 bytes per second. Conversely, to convert bytes per second to bits per second, you would multiply by 8.
Depends on your disk type, but about 48k per track.
To get a pretty much correct answer, multiply the KB by one million. (There are about one million KB in one GB).
To convert bits per second to bytes per second, you would divide the bits per second by 8, since there are 8 bits in a byte. For example, if you have 1000 bits per second, the equivalent would be 125 bytes per second (1000 bits / 8 = 125 bytes).
0.00195 KB equals 2 bytes
divide by 8,000. Kb is Kilobits = 1000 bits and a byte has 8 bits so Kb divide by 8 = KB and KB divide by 1,000 = bytes.
If the number you entered is base 10 then 11000 bytes will require 88000 bits of memory (not including parity bits etc.). If the number you entered is base 16 or base 8 or any other base, convert it to a decimal number and multiply by 8 to get the number of bits. You can also express 11000 bytes as kilobytes, megabytes or gigabytes if you can convert 11000 to the proper values for those units.