How Much Data
Is That?
Note: The information
shown below uses measures only associated with data. For example, a
kilo-anything is 1000 . . . except that when it is a kilobyte, it is 1024, an
even power of two.
Whenever we discuss quantities of data, we tend to do it in the abstract. We
speak of a kilobyte, or a megabyte or a gigabyte without really knowing what it
represents.
The following table shows various quantities of bytes, in each power of ten.
Usually, they are shown with multiples of 2 and 5 also. For example, 1
Kilobyte, 2 Kilobytes, 5 Kilobytes.
All the examples are approximate and are rounded. For example,
a computer card has 80 columns. If 50 columns contain data on a card, then two
cards will be 100 bytes. Also, a 3-1/2 inch diskette can contain 1.44
Megabytes. Showing it as 1 Megabyte reflects both (a) the diskette not
typically being filled and (b) rounding. Finally, a CD-ROM can hold more than 600
Megabytes. However, it is listed at that level as "typical" and as
the closest match.
Bytes (8 bits)
- 0.1 bytes: A single
yes/no decision (actually
0.125 bytes, but I rounded)
- 1 byte: One character
- 2 bytes:
- 5 bytes
- 10 bytes: One word (a word of
language, not a computer word)
- 20 bytes:
- 50 bytes:
- 100 bytes: Telegram; two
punched computer (Hollerith) cards
- 200 bytes:
- 500 bytes:
Kilobyte
1,024 bytes; 210;
approx. 1,000 or 10 3
- 1 Kilobyte: Joke; (very)
short story
- 2 Kilobytes: Typewritten page
- 10 Kilobytes: Page out of an
encyclopedia
- 20 Kilobytes:
- 50 Kilobytes: Image of a
document page, compressed
- 100 Kilobytes: Photograph,
low-resolution
- 200 Kilobytes: Two
boxes (4000) punched computer (Hollerith)
cards
- 500 Kilobytes: Five boxes,
one case (10,000 of punched computer (Hollerith) cards
Megabyte
1,048,576 bytes; 220;
approx 1,000,000 or 10 6
- 1 Megabyte: Small novel;
3-1/2 inch diskette
- 2 Megabytes: Photograph, high
resolution
- 5 Megabytes: Complete works
of Shakespeare; 30 seconds of broadcast-quality video
- 10 Megabytes: Minute of
high-fidelity sound; digital chest X-ray; Box of 3-1/2 inch diskettes
- 20 Megabytes: Two boxes of
3-1/2 inch diskettes
- 50 Megabytes: Digital
mammogram
- 100 Megabytes: Yard of books
on a shelf; two encyclopedia volumes
- 200 Megabytes: Reel of
9-track tape; IBM 3480 cartridge tape
- 500 Megabytes: CD-ROM
Gigabyte
1,073,741,824 bytes; 230;
approx 1,000,000,000 or 10 9
- 1 Gigabyte: Paper in the bed
of a pickup; symphony in high-fidelity sound; broadcast quality movie
- 2
Gigabytes: 20 yards of books on a shelf
- 5 Gigabytes: 8mm Exabyte tale
- 10 Gigabytes:
- 20 Gigabytes: Audio
collection of the works of Beethoven; five Exabyte tapes; VHS tape used to
store digital data
- 50 Gigabytes: Library floor
of books on shelves
- 100 Gigabytes: Library floor
of academic journals on shelves; large ID-1 digital tape
- 200 Gigabytes: 50 Exabyte
tapes
Terabyte
1,099,511,627,776 or 240;
approx. 1,000,000,000,000 or 10 12
- 1 Terabyte: Automated tape
robot; all the X-ray films in a large technological hospital; 50,000 trees
made into paper and printed; daily rate of EOS (Earth Orbiting System)
data (1998)
- 2 Terabytes: Academic
research ligrary
- 10 Terabytes: Printed
collection of the U. S. Library of Congress
- 50 Terabytes: Contents of a
large mass storage system
Petabyte
1,125,899,906,842,624 bytes or 250
approx. 1,000,000,000,000,000 or 10 15
- 1 Petabyte: 3 years of EOS
data (2001)
- 2 Petabytes: All U.
S. academic research libraries
- 20 Petabytes: 1995 production
of hard-disk drives
- 200 Petabytes: All printed
material; 1995 production of digital magnetic tape
Exabyte
1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes or 260
approx. 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 or 10 18
- 5 Exabytes: All words ever
spoken by human beings.
Zettabyte
1,180,591,620,717,411,303,424 bytes or 270
approx. 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 or 10 21
Yottabyte
1,208,925,819,614,629,174,706,176 bytes or 280
approx. 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 or 10
24