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<blockquote data-quote="el_cheapo" data-source="post: 463212" data-attributes="member: 20910"><p>5 Terabytes is actually pretty huge, I would be shocked if you needed more and also were not aware that you had tons of data. To put it in practical terms the common unit of measurement programs use/ we see files described as is in MB, a fair quality photo is probably in the 1.5 MB range, text files, excel sheets, general documents are typically less. So if you put 1,048,576 MB together it's considered a Terabyte. That drive will store five of those. </p><p></p><p>2 Hours of high quality video (1080 p) is about 4 Gigabytes, there are 1024 gigabytes in a Terabyte, so even if you have a bunch of movies ripped to your PC or home videos you're still likely good.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="el_cheapo, post: 463212, member: 20910"] 5 Terabytes is actually pretty huge, I would be shocked if you needed more and also were not aware that you had tons of data. To put it in practical terms the common unit of measurement programs use/ we see files described as is in MB, a fair quality photo is probably in the 1.5 MB range, text files, excel sheets, general documents are typically less. So if you put 1,048,576 MB together it's considered a Terabyte. That drive will store five of those. 2 Hours of high quality video (1080 p) is about 4 Gigabytes, there are 1024 gigabytes in a Terabyte, so even if you have a bunch of movies ripped to your PC or home videos you're still likely good. [/QUOTE]
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