petabyte
Appearance
See also: Petabyte
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]petabyte (plural petabytes)
- One quadrillion (1015, or 1,000,000,000,000,000) bytes or 1,000 terabytes.
- (computing, informal) a pebibyte.
- 2008 June 23, Chris Anderson, “The End of Theory: The Data Deluge Makes the Scientific Method Obsolete”, in Wired[1], →ISSN:
- As we moved along that progression, we went from the folder analogy to the file cabinet analogy to the library analogy to — well, at petabytes we ran out of organizational analogies.
- 2017, Jeffrey R. Di Leo, Higher Education under Late Capitalism, Springer, →ISBN, page 82:
- The Hadron Collider has gone from producing 320 terabytes of data a week to a petabyte a second. In short, it has been said that the total amount of data created worldwide in 2011 was about one zetabyte[sic] (or 1,000,000 petabytes) and that this figure will increase by 50%–60% in each subsequent year.
Synonyms
[edit]Coordinate terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]1,000,000,000,000,000 bytes
|
Czech
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]petabyte m inan
Declension
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- byte in Akademický slovník cizích slov, 1995, at prirucka.ujc.cas.cz
Portuguese
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Unadapted borrowing from English petabyte.
Noun
[edit]petabyte m (plural petabytes)
Synonyms
[edit]Coordinate terms
[edit]- Multiples of the byte: kilobyte, megabyte, gigabyte, terabyte, petabyte, exabyte, zettabyte, yottabyte
Related terms
[edit]Categories:
- English terms prefixed with peta-
- English 3-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- en:Computing
- English informal terms
- English terms with quotations
- Czech terms prefixed with peta-
- Czech terms with IPA pronunciation
- Czech lemmas
- Czech nouns
- Czech masculine nouns
- Czech inanimate nouns
- Czech masculine inanimate nouns
- Czech hard masculine inanimate nouns
- Czech nouns with regular foreign declension
- Portuguese terms borrowed from English
- Portuguese unadapted borrowings from English
- Portuguese terms derived from English
- Portuguese lemmas
- Portuguese nouns
- Portuguese countable nouns
- Portuguese terms spelled with Y
- Portuguese masculine nouns
- pt:Computing