Taxonomy vs Megabyte - What's the difference?
taxonomy | megabyte |
The science or the technique used to make a classification.
A classification; especially , a classification in a hierarchical system.
(taxonomy, uncountable) The science of finding, describing, classifying and naming organisms.
One million bytes. SI Symbol: MB
* 1964 , IBM,
* 1973 , IBM,
(computing) 1,048,576 bytes; a mebibyte. Frequently abbreviated MB.
* 2003 , Michael Meyers, Managing and Troubleshooting PCs , page 933
* 2004 , Kerry Cox & Christopher Gerg, Managing Security with Snort and IDS Tools , page 92
* 2006 , Eriq Oliver Neale, Microsoft Small Business Server 2003 Unleashed , page 290
As nouns the difference between taxonomy and megabyte
is that taxonomy is the science or the technique used to make a classification while megabyte is one million bytes. SI Symbol: MB.taxonomy
English
(wikipedia taxonomy)Noun
(taxonomies)Synonyms
* alpha taxonomyDerived terms
* folk taxonomy * scientific taxonomySee also
* classification * rank * taxon * domain * kingdom * subkingdom * superphylum * phylum * subphylum * class * subclass * infraclass * superorder * order * suborder * infraorder * parvorder * superfamily * family * subfamily * genus * species * subspecies * superregnum * regnum * subregnum * superphylum * phylum * subphylum * classis * subclassis * infraclassis * superordo * ordo * subordo * infraordo * taxon * superfamilia * familia * subfamilia * ontologymegabyte
English
(megabyte)Noun
(en noun)System/360 System Summary, page 27
- The IBM 2301 Drum Storage (Figure 20) provides random access storage of approximately 4 million bytes at a data rate of 1.2 megabytes per second.
Reference Manual for IBM 3340/3344 Disk Storage, page 3
- This 70-megabyte [69,889,536 bytes] data module contains fixed heads in addition to the normal access heads.
- One megabyte is 1,048,576 bytes. One megahertz, however is a million Hertz.
- Defaults to 2 megabytes (2,097,152 bytes).
- By default, each log file [...] is exactly 5 megabytes (5,242,880 bytes) in size.
References
*The IEC explanation of its definitions----