Film, Media & TV1 min ago
Computer storage
6 Answers
Why are CF and SD cards always in multiples of 4 Mb - could they be 3, 6 or 27 Mb?
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte
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http://computer.howstuffworks.com/bytes.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte
or this
http://computer.howstuffworks.com/bytes.htm
We could in decimal, i.e. from 0 to 9, then 10, 11, 12, etc.
Computers use binary, which is just another number system, but it's not as obvious to us humans (we probably use decimal because we have 10 digits on our hands).
Binary means either 0 or 1, and combinations of lots of them. So there's a total of 2 numbers to choose from (hence the 'bi' part of binary). And so all numbers that computers use are multiples of 2:
2^1 = 2
2^2 = 4
2^3 = 8
2^4 = 16
2^5 = 32
2^6 = 64
etc.
Computers use binary, which is just another number system, but it's not as obvious to us humans (we probably use decimal because we have 10 digits on our hands).
Binary means either 0 or 1, and combinations of lots of them. So there's a total of 2 numbers to choose from (hence the 'bi' part of binary). And so all numbers that computers use are multiples of 2:
2^1 = 2
2^2 = 4
2^3 = 8
2^4 = 16
2^5 = 32
2^6 = 64
etc.