Yes
The same as a million divide by 4.
No 1.4 million is the same as 1,400,000 and 8 million is the same as 8,000,000. 8 million is almost 6 times bigger than 1.4 million (5.714 times larger to be exact).
198 milion is the same as 198 million: no other number is the same.
I had the same question on my math test.The answer is 6.9 million.
They are both the same thing it is just the megabit is larger than the kilobit by 1024 times. The term bit is refering to a 0 or a 1 in data storage. So a megabit can hold 1,024,000 bits of data or 0's and 1's where as a kilobit can hold 1024 bits.
MB means million bits and KB means thousand bits. 238 KB would be the same as .238 MB.
Generally, but bit rate can be defined as any bit per unit of time so it could also refer to bits per minute, bits per hour or bits per day or bits per year etc...For the most part though bit rate is bits per second.
"Megs" or Megabytes are a measurement of storage. "MBPS" or Megabits per second are a measurement of bandwidth. Storage measurements only measure how much space a file may take up, or how much space is left on disk. Bandwidth measures how quickly data can transfer to/from one place to another, whether that be from a hard drive to RAM, or from one computer to another. Megabits per second does NOT equal Megabytes per second. Bits and bytes are different sized units of measurement. 8 bits = 1 byte 1024 bytes = 1 kilobyte 1024 kilobytes = 1 megabyte 1024 megabytes = 1 gigabyte 1024 gigabytes = 1 terabyte Since bandwidth is measured in bits, the measurements are more like that 1024 bits = 1 kilobit 1024 kilobits = 1 megabit 1024 megabits = 1 gigabit Therefore to compare 30 megabits to 30 megabytes, we can do a simple equation to find out the megabytes you can expect to transfer per second. 30 megabits = 31457280 bits 31457280 / 8 = 3932160 bytes ( 3932160 bytes / 1024 ) / 1024 = 3.75 megabytes per second. Which can be simplified by simply dividing our megabits by 8.
Mbps is not a file size, but a file transfer rate. It stands for "mega bits per second", in the same way that kbpsstands for "kilo bits per second".Bits, however, are different from bytes. Bytes are made of 8 bits. A kilobyte (kb) is 1024 bytes(because computing uses multiples of 4, like 8, 16, 32, 64...etc), and a megabyte (mb) is 1024 kilobytesBecause 8 bits make a byte, a kilobyte is 8192 bits, but 1024 bytes.Coming back to the question, if your transfer rate is 4 mbps, and the transfer lasts for 10 seconds, the file size is 5 megabytes.Be careful though, because Mbps = megabits per second, but MBps = megabytes per second.
That would be 8 million feet in 8 million. As you didnt specify the second unit of measurement (8 million of what?), I would just presume its the same as the first unit of measurement you provided
1024bitsIf "Bitmap" refers to a specific entity, image or file: I do not know. But if "Bitmap" refers to a general image then it is 8 bytes or 64 bits per pixel. I just made 3 1*1 bitmap images at colordepths 2bits (monochrome), 8 bits (256 colors) and 24 bits (16 Million colors). The sizes of these images were the same! (surprized me too!) Then I made a 1*2 pixel image and it was 66 bytes (528 bits) so the "overhead Microsoft paint puts on a bitmap is 400 bits. This could be an effect of limitations inherent in Microsoft Paint.
Please note that the speed is the same for 1 second or for 1 hour or whatever. Light travels 300,000 km per second, or 300 million meters per second.
No! 300 Megahertz is equal to 300 MILLION cycles per second. The unit "Hertz" is defined as cycles per second, and the prefix "Mega" means millions.
The one who transmits more data bits in the same length of time, or the same number of data bits in less time, has the faster transmission rate.
During the Super Bowl, advertising is worth approximately 100,000.00 per second, so a full minute would be worth 6 million dollars, or 6,000,000.00 But if you advertised on another channel at the same time it would be peanuts!!!!! ===================================== For Super Bowl 2013 they are charging $3.5 million per 30-second spot
The units are wrong. A megabyte is a 1000 kilobytes, and a megabit is 1000 kilobits. So 1/1000 of a megabit is a kilobit. As a unit gets larger for the same amount, the decimal point gets moved further to the left. Now, if you mean the older terminology when everything was based on 1024, that was all given new prefixes. So a mebibyte is 1024 kibibytes, thus a kibibyte is 1/1024 of a mebibyte.