Your brain can store about 2.5 petabytes of information—that's a million gigabytes.
✓ TRUE FACT
“Petabytes” is an analogy comparing brain capacity to digital storage; estimates vary wildly because the brain doesn’t store data like a hard drive. Numbers like 2.5 PB are meant to convey “enormous capacity,” not a measurable file limit. The more accurate point: memory is distributed and reconstructive, not a fixed folder size.
🤯 "Your brain can store about 2.5 petabytes of information—that's a million gigabytes. And still forget why you walked into the kitchen."