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6 answers

Byte. There's lots more information at the link below. Here's a quick quote from the entry:

"A byte holds the equivalent of a single character, such as the letter A, a dollar sign or decimal point. For numbers, a byte can hold a single decimal digit (0 to 9), two numeric digits (packed decimal) or a number from 0 to 255 (binary numbers)."

2007-06-01 06:06:35 · answer #1 · answered by Navigator 7 · 0 0

Normally it takes up 1 byte.

On a Unicode system it'll take up 2.

2007-06-01 13:07:29 · answer #2 · answered by Kasey C 7 · 0 0

1 bit
1 byte = 8 bits

2007-06-01 13:22:45 · answer #3 · answered by qna00001 1 · 0 0

bit.

2 bits = 1 byte
1000 bytes = 1 kilobyte
1000 kilobytes = 1 megabyte
1000 megabytes = 1 gigabyte

2007-06-01 13:08:32 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Cubic foot.

2007-06-01 13:09:55 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

byte ??

mega byte, AKA 'MB' ??

2007-06-01 13:08:17 · answer #6 · answered by Laurence B 4 · 0 0

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