The following list is a collection of estimates of the quantities of data contained by
the various media. Each is rounded to be a power of 10 times 1, 2 or 5. Suggestions and
contributions are welcomed, especially picture files or pointers to pictures, and
disagreements are accepted
The numbers quoted are approximate. In fact a kilobyte is 1024 bytes not 1000 bytes but
this fact does not keep me awake at night.
- Bytes
(8 bits)
- 0.1 bytes: A binary decision
- 1 byte: A single character
- 10 bytes: A single word
- 100 bytes: A telegram OR A punched card
- Kilobyte
(1000 bytes)
- 1 Kilobyte: A very short story
- 2 Kilobytes: A Typewritten page
- 10 Kilobytes: An encyclopaedic page OR A deck of punched cards
- 50 Kilobytes: A compressed document image page
- 100 Kilobytes: A
low-resolution photograph
- 200 Kilobytes: A box of punched cards
- 500 Kilobytes: A very heavy box of punched cards
- Megabyte
(1 000 000 bytes)
- 1 Megabyte: A small novel OR A 3.5 inch floppy disk
- 2 Megabytes: A high resolution photograph
- 5 Megabytes: The
complete works of Shakespeare OR 30 seconds of TV-quality video
- 10 Megabytes: A minute of high-fidelity sound OR A digital chest X-ray
- 20 Megabytes: A box of floppy disks
- 50 Megabytes: A digital mammogram
- 100 Megabytes: 1 meter of shelved books OR A two-volume encyclopaedic book
- 200 Megabytes: A reel of 9-track tape OR An IBM 3480 cartridge tape
- 500 Megabytes: A CD-ROM OR The hard disk of a PC
- Gigabyte
(1 000 000 000 bytes)
- 1 Gigabyte: A pickup truck filled with paper OR A symphony in high-fidelity sound
OR A movie at TV quality
- 2 Gigabytes: 20 meters of shelved books OR A stack of 9-track tapes
- 5 Gigabytes: An 8mm Exabyte tape
- 10 Gigabytes:
- 20 Gigabytes: A good collection of the works of Beethoven OR 5 Exabyte tapes OR A VHS tape used for digital data
- 50 Gigabytes: A floor of books OR Hundreds of 9-track tapes
- 100 Gigabytes: A floor of academic journals OR A large ID-1 digital tape
- 200 Gigabytes: 50 Exabyte tapes
- Terabyte
(1 000 000 000 000 bytes)
- 1 Terabyte: An automated tape robot OR All the X-ray films in a large
technological hospital OR 50000 trees made into paper and printed OR Daily
rate of EOS data (1998)
- 2 Terabytes: An academic research library OR A cabinet full of Exabyte tapes
- 10 Terabytes: The printed collection of the US Library of Congress
- 50 Terabytes: The contents of a large Mass
Storage System
- Petabyte
(1 000 000 000 000 000 bytes)
- 1 Petabyte: 3 years of EOS data (2001)
- 2 Petabytes: All US academic research libraries
- 20 Petabytes: Production of hard-disk drives in 1995
- 200 Petabytes: All printed material OR
Production of digital magnetic tape in 1995
- Exabyte
(1 000 000 000 000 000 000 bytes)
- 5 Exabytes: All words ever spoken by human beings.
by PC Hariharan
- Kilo
Greek khilioi = 1000
- Mega
Greek megas = great, e.g., Alexandros Megos
- Giga
Latin gigas = giant
- Tera
Greek teras = monster
- Peta
Greek pente = five, fifth prefix, peNta - N = peta
- Exa
Greek hex = six, sixth prefix, Hexa - H = exa
Remember, in standard French, the initial H is silent, so they would pronounce Hexa as
Exa. It is far easier to call it Exa for everyone's sake, right?
- Zetta
almost homonymic with Greek Zeta, but last letter of the Latin alphabet
- Yotta
almost homonymic with Greek iota, but penultimate letter of the Latin
alphabet.
The first prefix is number-derived; second, third, and fourth are based on mythology.
Fifth and sixth are supposed to be just that: fifth and sixth. But, with the seventh,
another fork has been taken. The General Conference of Weights and Measures (CGMP, from
the French; they have been headquartered, since 1874, in Sevres on the outskirts of Paris)
has now decided to name the prefixes, starting with the seventh, with the letters of the
Latin alphabet, but starting from the end. Now, that makes it all clear! Remember, both
according to CGMP and SI, the prefixes refer to powers of 10. Mega is 10**6, exactly
1,000,000, kilo is exactly 1000, not 1024.
End of Etymology of Units 101.
You might also like to check out The Peta Principle, by
Jim Binder, of the San Diego Supercomputer Center, and read this extract from The Jargon File, which
suggests abandoning greek letters and using the names of the Marx Brothers instead.