From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishkilobytekil‧o‧byte /ˈkɪləbaɪt/ noun [countable] (written abbreviation K or KB) TDa unit for measuring computer information, equal to 1,024 bytes
Examples from the Corpus
kilobyte• At the resolution available, a single illustration accounts for 6.25 kilobytes of data.• They are called delta frames and, typically, may consist of no more than 5 kilobytes of data.• For display through a television, one image needs about 800 kilobytes, making the storage problem even more acute.• Even a single, still image at this quality requires about 800 kilobytes of data.• As a result you can end up with a file bordering on the megabytes instead of a few tens of kilobytes.• The memory is divided into bits, bytes and? or kilobytes.From Longman Business Dictionarykilobytekil‧o‧byte /ˈkɪləbaɪt/, written abbreviation kb noun [countable]COMPUTING a unit of 1,024 BYTEs, used for measuring the amount of information a computer can hold