yes, skype is a live voice over ip streaming application. The longer you have an active call the more mb are used. An email is usually small, about 20kb(if no images are added). Install a bandwith monitor application to monitor the amount of mb you use.
Minecraft uses a load of memory! (For me, it's 989 MB of RAM) You should probably close Minecraft if you're using Skype at the same time.
There are many sizes of mail that a big file folder can hold when using an email address. The average size of most large folders for email is usually about 16 MB.
It depends on the length and quality of the video. Most videos at 720p quality will consume about 1.6 megabytes per second.
"Megabytes in" is the amount of data transferred from the internet to the computer; "megabytes out" is the opposite.
Two gigabytes are equal to: * 2048 megabytes, when using the binary number system * 2000 megabytes, when using the decimal number system2 gigabytes, using the metric index conversion as per the recommendation of the IEC, is equal to 2000 megabytes. However, the use of metric index conversions is still ambiguous, and may refer to 2048 megabytes in certain instances.
There are 1,000 Megabytes per 1 Gigabyte, so using that conversion there are 104,000 MB in 104 GB.
No, it is less.
This depends on your email provider. Most webmails such as yahoo, gmail, and hotmail will not allow binary attachments bigger than 2 megabytes. If you are using your ISP's email server, it may be more forgiving than that.
Mb stands for Megabit, where one megabit is equivalent to 125 kilobytes or 125,000 bytes.
Its all about what you are using the space for. It doesn't matter whether its a 1TB drive or 500MB drive. Its all about what you are using it for.
Approximately 0.093MB according to binary megabytes, and 0.0959MB using decimal megabytes.
there are 1024 kilobytes in one megabyte. Ex 2048kb = 2 mb