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  2. Orders of magnitude (data) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orders_of_magnitude_(data)

    Orders of magnitude (data) An order of magnitude is usually a factor of ten. Thus, four orders of magnitude is a factor of 10,000 or 10 4. This article presents a list of multiples, sorted by orders of magnitude, for units of information measured in bits and bytes. The byte is a common unit of measurement of information (kilobyte, kibibyte ...

  3. Binary prefix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix

    t. e. A binary prefix is a unit prefix that indicates a multiple of a unit of measurement by an integer power of two. The most commonly used binary prefixes are kibi (symbol Ki, meaning 210 = 1024), mebi (Mi, 2 20 = 1 048 576), and gibi (Gi, 2 30 = 1 073 741 824). They are most often used in information technology as multipliers of bit and byte ...

  4. Internet Archive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Archive

    The Archive is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit operating in the United States. In 2019, it had an annual budget of $37 million, derived from revenue from its Web crawling services, various partnerships, grants, donations, and the Kahle-Austin Foundation. [ 42 ] The Internet Archive also manages periodic funding campaigns.

  5. Units of information - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Units_of_information

    In digital computing and telecommunications, a unit of information is the capacity of some standard data storage system or communication channel, used to measure the capacities of other systems and channels. In information theory, units of information are also used to measure information contained in messages and the entropy of random variables.

  6. Big data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_data

    After filtering and refraining from recording more than 99.99995% [141] of these streams, there are 1,000 collisions of interest per second. [142] [143] [144] As a result, only working with less than 0.001% of the sensor stream data, the data flow from all four LHC experiments represents 25 petabytes annual rate before replication (as of 2012 ...

  7. Common Crawl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Crawl

    Common Crawl is a nonprofit 501 (c) (3) organization that crawls the web and freely provides its archives and datasets to the public. [1][2] Common Crawl's web archive consists of petabytes of data collected since 2008. [3] It completes crawls generally every month. [4] Common Crawl was founded by Gil Elbaz. [5]

  8. PetaBox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PetaBox

    In 2007, the Internet Archive data center housed approximately three petabytes of Petabox storage technology. In 2010, the fourth version of the Petabox began operation. Each Petabox allowed for 480 TB of raw storage (240 disks of 2 TB each, set up with 24 disks per 4U high rack units and with 10 units per rack) running on Linux. [4] [5]

  9. BigQuery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BigQuery

    Launched. May 19, 2010; 14 years ago (2010-05-19) Current status. Active. BigQuery is a managed, serverless data warehouse product by Google, offering scalable analysis over large quantities of data. It is a Platform as a Service (PaaS) that supports querying using a dialect of SQL. It also has built-in machine learning capabilities.