Mega Mangamerate



Look up mega- in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  1. Mega Man Games Ranked By Difficulty
  2. Mega Man Games Ranked

Mega Man Games Ranked By Difficulty

Parking Games: Who ever thought parking could be so fun? These parking games require precise keyboard control, quick reflexes, and a good sense of timing. Parking your car, boat, bus or spaceship in the correct space, within a time limit, and without crashing into things (or even worse, people!) is more challenging than you might think, but practice makes perfect. Spider-Man 3: The Game (+5 Trainer) I double dare you to fill this field! The Mega Man (Classic) series had quite a few of these: Mega Man 2 had the Air Shooter, which travelled upwards in a spread. Magma Bazooka from Mega Man 9 combined this with Charged Attack. A point-blank charged shot was one of the most painful things for MiniBosses and the most painful thing against Hornet Man. Mega Man 10 had the Triple Blade. Stick Fight: The Game is a very simple stick game but that simple game could actually provide a very exciting and thrilling game experience for every gamers. It offers 80 unique and challenging levels that every gamers who loves thrills and excitement will surely enjoy!

Mega is a unit prefix in metric systems of units denoting a factor of one million (106 or 1000000). It has the unit symbol M. It was confirmed for use in the International System of Units (SI) in 1960. Mega comes from Ancient Greek: μέγας, romanized: mégas, lit.'great'. [1]

Common examples of usage[edit]

  • Megapixel: 1 million pixels in a digital camera
  • One megatonne of TNT equivalent amounts to approx. 4 petajoules and is the approximate energy released on igniting one million tonnes of TNT. The unit is often used in measuring the explosive power of nuclear weapons.
  • Megahertz: frequency of electromagnetic radiation for radio and television broadcasting, GSM, etc. 1 MHz = 1,000,000 Hz.
  • Megabyte: unit of information equal to one million bytes (SI standard).
  • Megawatt: equal to one million watts of power. It is commonly used to measure the output of power plants, as well as the power consumption of electric locomotives, data centers, and other entities that heavily consume electricity.
  • Megadeath: (or megacorpse) is one million human deaths, usually caused by a nuclear explosion. The term was used by scientists and thinkers who strategized likely outcomes of all-out nuclear warfare.
Mega MangamerateMega

Exponentiation[edit]

Mega

Mega Man Games Ranked

When units occur in exponentiation, such as in square and cubic forms, any multiples-prefix is considered part of the unit, and thus included in the exponentiation.

Ranked
  • 1 Mm2 means one square megametre or the size of a square of 1000000m by 1000000m or 1012m2, and not 1000000square metres (106 m2).
  • 1 Mm3 means one cubic megametre or the size of a cube of 1000000m by 1000000m by 1000000m or 1018 m3, and not 1000000cubic metres (106 m3)

Computing[edit]

Mega Mangamerate

In some fields of computing, mega may sometimes denote 1,048,576 (220) of information units, for example, a megabyte, a megaword, but denotes 1000000 (106) units of other quantities, for example, transfer rates: 1megabit/s = 1000000bit/s. The prefix mebi- has been suggested as a prefix for 220 to avoid ambiguity.

PrefixBase 10DecimalEnglish wordAdoption[nb 1]
NameSymbolShort scaleLong scale
yottaY10241000000000000000000000000 septillion quadrillion1991
zettaZ10211000000000000000000000 sextillion trilliard1991
exaE10181000000000000000000 quintillion trillion1975
petaP10151000000000000000 quadrillion billiard1975
teraT10121000000000000 trillion billion1960
gigaG1091000000000 billion milliard1960
megaM1061000000 million1873
kilok1031000 thousand1795
hectoh102100 hundred1795
decada10110 ten1795
1001 one
decid10−10.1 tenth1795
centic10−20.01 hundredth1795
millim10−30.001 thousandth1795
microμ10−60.000001 millionth1873
nanon10−90.000000001 billionth milliardth1960
picop10−120.000000000001 trillionth billionth1960
femtof10−150.000000000000001 quadrillionth billiardth1964
attoa10−180.000000000000000001 quintillionth trillionth1964
zeptoz10−210.000000000000000000001 sextillionth trilliardth1991
yoctoy10−240.000000000000000000000001 septillionth quadrillionth1991
  1. ^Prefixes adopted before 1960 already existed before SI. The introduction of the CGS system was in 1873.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Oxford English Dictionary (OED Online)'. www.oed.com (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. June 2001. Retrieved 2017-09-18. Origin: A borrowing from Greek. Etymon: Greek μεγα-. ... Forming scientific and technical terms with the sense ‘very large’, ‘comparatively large’, or (esp. in Pathol.) ‘abnormally large’, often having correlatives beginning micro-, and sometimes also synonyms beginning macro-.

External links[edit]

Look up mega- in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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