When discussing largest database, the primary Online organization that will ring a bell is YouTube (Google in general). After under two years of operation YouTube has amassed the biggest video library (and along these lines one of the largest database) on the planet.
YouTube as of now brags a client base that watches more than 100 million clasps for each day representing over 60% of all recordings viewed on the web. In August of 2006, the Wall Street Journal anticipated YouTube’s database to the sound of 45 terabytes of recordings.
While that figure doesn’t sound frightfully high in respect to the measure of information accessible on the web, YouTube has been encountering a time of considerable development (more than 65,000 new recordings for every day) since that figures distribution, which means that YouTube’s database measure has conceivably dramatically increased over the most recent 5 months.
Evaluating the span of YouTube’s database is especially troublesome because of the shifting sizes and lengths of every video. In any case in the event that one were really goal oriented (and somewhat lenient) we could extend that the YouTube database will hope to develop as much as 20 terabytes of information in the one month from now.
Given numerically : 65,000 recordings for each day X 30 days for every month = 1,950,000 recordings every month; 1 terabyte = 1,048,576 megabytes. On the off chance that we accept that every video has a size of 1MB, YouTube would hope to grow 1.86 terabytes one month from now. Likewise, in the event that we accept that every video has a size of 10MB, YouTube would hope to grow 18.6 terabytes one month from now.