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DISC LAMB LOIN EN CROUTE4/7 OZ
*CAKE, BANANA 25 OZ
*RICE PILAF W/ MUSHRM 2/12 OZ
SALMON FILLETS 4/6 OZ
TURKEY WHOLE SMOKED 8LB
LOBSTER BISQUE 2/16 OZ
*SAUCE,BORDELS FRZ TUBE 4 OZ
*COOKIE DOUGH MILK CHOC W/MAC
COOKBOOK MEAT
GOURMET BURGERS 8/4 OZ

Quantities of bytes
Common prefix Binary prefix
Name Symbol Decimal
SI
Binary
JEDEC
Name Symbol Binary
IEC
kilobyteKB/kB 103210 kibibyteKiB210
megabyteMB 106220 mebibyteMiB220
gigabyteGB 109230 gibibyteGiB230
terabyteTB 1012240 tebibyteTiB240
petabytePB 1015250 pebibytePiB250
exabyteEB 1018260 exbibyteEiB260
zettabyteZB 1021270 zebibyteZiB270
yottabyteYB 1024280 yobibyteYiB280

A megabyte is a unit of information or computer storage equal to either 106 (1,000,000) bytes or 220 (1,048,576) bytes, depending on context. In rare cases, it is used to mean 1000×1024 (1,024,000) bytes. It is commonly abbreviated as Mbyte or MB (compare Mb, for the megabit). The term megabyte was coined in 1970."Megabyte."Webster\'s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary. 9th ed. 1983.

Contents

Definition

The term "megabyte" is ambiguous because it is commonly used to mean either 10002 bytes or 10242 bytes. The confusion originated as compromise technical jargon for the byte multiples that needed to be expressed by the powers of 2 but lacked a convenient name. As 1024 (210) is roughly equal to 1000 (103), roughly corresponding SI multiples began to be used as approximate binary multiples. By the end of 2007, standards and government authorities including IEC, IEEE, EU, and NIST, had addressed this ambiguity by promulgating standards requiring the use of megabyte to describe strictly 10002 bytes and "mebibyte" to describe 10242 bytes. This is reflected in an increasing number of software projects, but most file managers still show file sizes in "megabytes" ("MB") in the binary sense (10242 bytes). The term remains ambiguous and it can follow any one of the following common definitions:

  1. 1,000,000 bytes (10002, 106): This is the definition recommended by the International System of Units (SI) and the International Electrotechnical Commission IEC. This definition is used in networking contexts and most storage media, particularly hard drives, Flash-based storage, and DVDs, and is also consistent with the other uses of the SI prefix in computing, such as CPU clock speeds or measures of performance.
  2. 1,048,576 bytes (10242, 220): This definition is most commonly used in reference to computer memory, but most software that display file size or drive capacity, including file managers also use this definition. See Consumer confusion (in the "gigabyte" article).
  3. 1,024,000 bytes (1000×1024): This is used to describe the formatted capacity of USB flash drives and the "1.44 MB" 3.5 inch HD floppy disk, which actually has a 1,440 KiB capacity, that is, 1,440×1,024 bytes, or 1,474,560 bytes.

Megabyte examples

Depending on compression methods and file format, a megabyte of data can roughly be:

  • a 1024×1024 pixel bitmap image with 256 colours (8 bpp color depth).
  • 1 minute of 128 kbit/s MP3 compressed music.
  • 6 seconds of uncompressed CD audio.
  • a typical book volume in text format (500 pages × 2000 characters).

See also

External links

References

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


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