I do believe this is only a conceived idea as far as an
”all at once movement.” There is NO SUCH storage device capable of containing, nor measuring that amount of data in its lifetime. It could, however, be argued that: we could have easily passed that bench mark since telegrams, which I feel could easily be argued as, the transfer of one bit at a time.
a Googlebyte is bigger than a kilobyte I've got a list so far it goes like this....bit, nanobyte, byte, kilobyte, megabyte, gigabyte, terabyte petabyte, exabyte, yotabyte, yotibyte, ?, ?, Googlebyte that is the order still trying to get the last ones
DVD is the largest of the 'hard media' as:DVD 4.7GB / 9.5Gb (dual layer)CD 780 MB (largest currently available)Floppy: 320KB / 512KB / 1.2MB (Magnetic Media)Hard Disk's (Magnetic Media) have much larger sizes, currently the largest produced single drive is 2 TB (Terabyte: 2,000 Gigabyte - at the time of this answer). One 1 Terabyte drive equals 425.53 4.7 GB DVD's.Please note that this does not include "Server" or "NAS" storage solutions that simply combine multiple drives into a single access point (Datacenter) - those are virtually unlimited in size (limited only by how much storage you can afford to add to the unit).Currently the whole history of everything in all languages of the Human Race is estimated to be 50 Petabyte's; the largest (known) datacenter in the world is Teradata, Database 12 at 50 Petabytes. (1 Petabyte = 1,024 Terabytes == 1,048,676 Gigabytes or 212,765.96 DVD's).India is starting a server farm in which there is supposed to be 1 googlebyte of storage possible which is a quintillion petabytes.1 PB = 1024 TB1TB = 1024 GB1 GB = 1024 MB1MB = 1024 KB1 KB = 1024 Bytes