Wednesday, June 14, 2006
How Much Text is in a Kilobyte or Megabyte?
A bit is the most basic unit of information. At their most fundamental level, most modern computers operate on binary bits which means that they can have two states, usually specified as a 0 or 1. Long strings of these bits can be used to represent most types of information including text, pictures and music.
Most modern computers are binary systems and therefore, they are particularly well suited to working with bits. Pure binary information, however, is of little use to humans. The binary number 11000101110 is equivalent to 1582; it is obvious that we are much more suited to working with digits and text instead of ones and zeros.
To help make computers more like our language-based way of thinking, groups of bits are joined into bytes. One byte is comprised of 8 bits. A set of 8 bits was chosen because this provides 256 total possibilities which is sufficient for specifying letters, numbers, spaces, punctuation and other extended characters. This very sentence, for example is composed of 125 bytes because there are 125 letters, digits, spaces and punctuation marks. Keep in mind that we are discussing pure text; some word processing programs, include other sorts of formatting data, and therefore the filesizes will be greater than the number of characters in the file.
It is estimated that a kilobyte can accommodate about 1/2 of a typewritten page. Therefore, one full page requires about 2 kilobytes. The chart below illustrates the number of bytes in common terms such as kilobyte and megabyte and how much text could be stored:
name
number of bytes
amount of text
kilobyte (kB)
210 or 1,024
1/2 page
megabyte (mB)
220 or 1,048,576
500 pages or 1 thick book
gigabyte (gB)
230 or 1,073,741,824
500,000 pages or 1,000 thick books
terabyte (tB)
240 or 1,099,511,627,776
1,000,000 thick books
petabyte
250 or 1,125,899,906,842,624
180 Libraries of Congress
exabyte
260 or 1,152,921,504,606,846,976
180 thousand Libraries of Congress
zettabyte
270 or 1,180,591,620,717,411,303,424
180 million Libraries of Congress
yottabyte
280 or 1,208,925,819,614,629,174,706,176
180 billion Libraries of Congress
The Library of Congress in Washington D.C. is said to be the world's largest library with over 28 million volumes. The numbers listed in the chart above are based on the assumption that the average book has 200 pages.
Most Compact Discs (CD) can hold approximately 750 megabytes (mB) which is roughly equivalent to 375,000 pages of text! DVDs can store 4.7 gigabytes (gB) or 2.3 million pages. The next generation of optical media, Blu-Ray discs, can hold an astonishing 27 gigabytes or 13.5 million pages which is roughly equivalent to the text contained in 67,500 books!
Data Measurement Chart
Data Measurement
Size
Bit
Single Binary Digit (1 or 0)
Byte
8 bits
Kilobyte (KB)
1,024 Bytes
or »
8192 bits
-------------------
Megabyte (MB)
1,024 Kilobytes
or »
1048576 Bytes
8388608 Bits
-------------------
Gigabyte (GB)
1,024 Megabytes
or »
1048576 KB
1073741824 Bytes
8589934592 Bits
------------------------------------
Terabyte (TB)
1,024 Gigabytes
or »
1048576 MB
1073741824 KB
1099511627776 Bytes
8796093022208 Bits
---------------------------------------
Petabyte (PB)
1,024 Terabytes
or »
1048576 GB
1073741824 MB
1099511627776 KB
1125899906842624 Bytes
9007199254740992 Bits
------------------------------------------
Exabyte (EB)
1,024 Petabytes
or »
1048576 TB
1073741824 GB
1099511627776 MB
1125899906842624 KB
11522921504606846976 Bytes
9223372036854775808 Bits
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Thats all for the day !
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