Transfer Rate per Different Time Units (current, 1000-based)
| minute per megabyte to terabyte per minute | 0.000001 |
|---|
| minute per megabyte to gigabyte per minute | 0.001 |
| minute per megabyte to megabyte per minute | 1 |
| minute per megabyte to kilobyte per minute | 1,000 |
| minute per megabyte to byte per minute | 1,000,000 |
A megabyte (MB) is 1,024 kilobytes. A gigabyte (GB) is 1,024 megabytes.
On average, Low-quality audio streaming uses 0.72MB per minute or 43.2MB per hour. Normal quality is typically 160kbps. Normal-quality music streaming uses 1.20MB per minute or 72MB per hour on average. High quality music is typically 320kbps.
A music CD holds 80 minutes worth of songs or 26 songs with a few minutes to provide a short space between each song. Six hours would be 60x6 or 360 minutes or 120 three minute songs.
Since we already have the information above, we can once again work it out and give you an estimate as to how much albums 1 GB can hold. Using the MP3 size of 4 MB, 4*14 =
56 MB for an album size.
How Many Songs Can Fit on 1 GB?
| MP3 Size | # of Albums |
|---|
| 4MB | 18 |
| 5MB | 14 |
| 6MB | 12 |
| 7MB | 10 |
Here are some quick numbers: 60 seconds video = 150-170 words (approx) 90 seconds video = 255 words (approx) 2 minute video = 300-340 words (approx) 3 minute video = 450 to 510 words (approx).
Low quality (240p or 320p) – 0.3GB (300MB) per hour. SD quality (480p video) – 0.7GB (700MB) per hour. HD quality (between 720p and 2K) – 0.9GB (720p), 1.5GB (1080p) and 3GB (2K) per hour. 4K Ultra HD quality – 7.2GB per hour.
1 minute=60 second, so it takes about 120 MB (or less, so lets say 1 minute=100 MB (mega bytes). Therefore 1 hour=60 minutes would take 6000 MB, that is about 6GB. In short: if you take a video in 720p for 1 hour you need a 6GB card.
Make Your iPhone Video Take Less Space With HEVC
| 1 minute h.264 | 1 hour h.264 |
|---|
| 720p HD @ 30 frames/sec | 60 MB | 3.5 GB |
| 1080p HD @ 30 frames/sec | 130 MB | 7.6 GB |
| 1080p HD @ 60 frames/sec | 200 MB | 11.7 GB |
| 1080p HD slo-mo @ 120 frames/sec | 350 MB | 21 GB |
It has produced a 50 MB file for 5 minutes of recording.
10 minutes takes up 3.5GB (1.7GB)
A 500MB data plan will allow you to browse the internet for around 6 hours, to stream 100 songs or to watch 1 hour of standard-definition video.
HD-quality video uses about 0.9GB (720p), 1.5GB (1080p) and 3GB (2K) per hour. UHD quality video uses a lot of data. A 4K stream uses about 7.2GB per hour.
The approximate size of each uncompressed frame is 5MB. At 30 frames per second, a raw HD video will need 5MBx30 = 150MB storage space per second.
Depending on audio settings, Spotify uses anywhere from half a megabyte (MB) up to 8MB for a typical song. A full hour of streaming music can use up to 150MB of data. That doesn't sound like a lot, but just a single hour of streaming per day can use up 6GB of mobile data over a month.
The result is a rough estimate of 3.28 megabytes(MB) per song. Does that seem about right for your library? To figure out how many 3.28MB songs can fit in a gigabyte(GB), divide 1024 by 3.28 because there are 1024 megabytes in one gigabyte.
Using Data Saver this came to 30MB in five minutes or 360MB for an
hour of viewing.
How much data does TikTok use?
| 5 minutes | 1 hour |
|---|
| Default | 70MB | 840MB |
| Data Saving | 30MB | 360MB |
In terms of data usage, 320 Kbps translates to approximately 2.40 MB per minute of audio or 115.2 MB per hour. So, streaming music for an entire 8-hour workday would chew through nearly 1 GB of data.
Number of songs that can be stored on a memory card or Sansa player
| 512MB | 16GB |
|---|
| Number of songs | 125 | 4000 |
How many songs are there in the world? 97 million and counting.
The average length of a song on the Billboard Hot 100 has decreased by 20 seconds in the past five years. Songs now average 3 minutes and 30 seconds — and are steadily shrinking. 6% of hit songs also averaged 2 minutes and 30 seconds or shorter last year, and sub-3 minute songs are becoming increasingly common.
MP3, 2 tracks, 192 kb/sIf recording a single track of audio, your storage will double. So 60 minutes of 24-bit 48 kHz BWAV audio will provide 2 hours of runtime. If you can remember that you're already a step ahead out in the field.
It varies depending on the length and bitrate of the songs. Right-click any song, show it in the Windows Explorer, and see how much space the folder containing them takes up. Assuming a mix of song lengths and 256kbps media an average of around 10Mb per song is reasonable. 700 songs at that size would be around 7Gb* ..
Storage Chart
| Storage Capacity1 | Photos (Compressed JPEG) |
|---|
| 8MP | 24MP |
|---|
| 8GB | 3000 | 1,000 |
| 16GB | 6000 | 2,000 |
| 32GB | 12000 | 4,000 |
File size – WAV files are large. A stereo, CD quality recording (44.1khz, 16-bit), works out at 10.09 MB per minute. Moving up to 48kHz 24-bit stereo (which will improve both the frequency range and the available dynamic range) will increase file size to 16.48 MB per minute.
it really varies depending on the size of each individual song but it can hold up to anything from 16,000-22,000 songs.
For example, 250GB can hold more than 30,000 average size photos or songs. If you're planning on storing movies, then you definitely want to upgrade to at least 500GB, maybe even 1TB. Granted, this is all for conventional hard drives.
The highest quality MP3 bitrate is 320 kbps at 16 bit. You can encode MP3s as low as 96 kbps. MP3s use a compression codec that removes frequencies while trying to preserve as much of the original recording as possible.
1 GB yields about 250 songs at approximately 4 minutes each. So 4gb = 1000 songs and 8gb = 2000.