How many gigabit in 1 milliterabyte? The answer is 8.796093022208. We assume you are converting between gigabit and milliterabyte. You can view more details on each measurement unit: gigabit or milliterabyte The main non-SI unit for computer data storage is the byte. 1 byte is equal to 8.0E-9 gigabit, or 9.0949470177293E-10 milliterabyte. Note that rounding errors may occur, so always check the results. Use this page to learn how to convert between gigabits and milliterabytes. Type in your own numbers in the form to convert the units!
1 gigabit to milliterabyte = 0.11369 milliterabyte
5 gigabit to milliterabyte = 0.56843 milliterabyte
10 gigabit to milliterabyte = 1.13687 milliterabyte
20 gigabit to milliterabyte = 2.27374 milliterabyte
30 gigabit to milliterabyte = 3.41061 milliterabyte
40 gigabit to milliterabyte = 4.54747 milliterabyte
50 gigabit to milliterabyte = 5.68434 milliterabyte
75 gigabit to milliterabyte = 8.52651 milliterabyte
100 gigabit to milliterabyte = 11.36868 milliterabyte
You can do the reverse unit conversion from milliterabyte to gigabit, or enter any two units below:
The gigabit is a multiple of the unit bit for digital information or computer storage.
1 gigabit = 1,000,000,000 bits.
Note that the official SI definition uses the "gibibit" or Gib unit to represent 230 bits.
The SI prefix "milli" represents a factor of 10-3, or in exponential notation, 1E-3.
So 1 milliterabyte = 10-3 terabytes.
The definition of a terabyte is as follows:
A terabyte (commonly abbreviated TB) is a measurement term for data storage capacity.
The number of bytes in a terabyte is sometimes stated to be approximately 1.0995 × 1012. This difference arises from a conflict between the long standing tradition of using binary prefixes and base 2 in the computer world, and the more popular decimal (SI) standard adopted widely both within and outside of the computer industry. Standards organizations such as IEC, IEEE and ISO recommend to use the alternative term tebibyte (TiB) to signify the traditional measure of 10244 bytes, or 1024 gibibytes.
The capacities of computer storage devices are typically advertised using their SI standard values, but the capacities reported by software operating systems uses the binary values. A NTFS formatted terabyte hard drive shows 931 gigabytes of free, usable storage space under Windows XP.
Most users prefer to calculate unit conversions using the binary definition, so this site uses non-SI units.
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