The oft-snickered-at "smuggling 3mb of hot RAM" line from Neuromancer may have been prophetic after all.

If you are a scifi author, it's a mistake to give any hard numbers in real-world units. You will, most likely, greatly underestimate. Even trying to greatly overestimate, you will underestimate.

Commander Data's specifications in the Star Trek TNG episode The Measure of a Man from 1989: 800 quadrillion bits of storage, computing at 60 trillion operations per second.

100 petabytes. That's a big machine. A very big machine. But supercomputers now have memories measured in petabytes.

They never used "bits" again in any Star Trek script. It was kiloquads and gigaquads from then on.

That's fun! To further prove your point I saw this and thought "yeah maybe 100 PB is more common these days but 60 trillion ops / second seems like a lot"

Then I did some googling and it turns out that a single 5090 GPU has a peak FP32 performance of over 100 TFLOPS!