That's two feature lengh films on a 4GB drive, with memory to spare. Depending on the sites I go to, some say that MP3s hold songs per gigabyte. At this storage capacity, you can safely store millions of documents, thousands of hours of music, or up to 25, photos. A 32 GB iPod can hold approximately 7, songs. On the default setting, the dash cam will record up to 1. If we use that as an average we are looking at about songs per gigabyte.
The iPhone and iPod touch do have some space reserved for system software as well. Figure roughly 7GB of storage is available. That would be songs per 8 GB iPhone with 4 minute songs. Most movies are anywhere from 1 to 2 GB each when p , with a few of the longer movies such as The Lord of the Rings reaching 2.
If you assume an average of 1. Same with game lovers and those who download heavy data apps on their devices, it is most preferable to go for the GB. SanDisk suggests a 16GB card can hold 4, songs of an average of 3. The actual amount depends on the bitrate, which affects the quality of the song.
As an example, default iTunes tracks are recorded at kbps, which would work out at 4, songs at 3. 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 kbps media an average of around 10Mb per song is reasonable. Buy one of these and you may need to change your habits to stay within the limits. Although photos can vary in file size, we can reasonably expect that on the iPhone SE 64GB you can take up to 14, photos before running out of storage. Jan 28, PM. Not scientific mind you, too many variables, but figure every 1GB of storage will get you about songs.
Page content loaded. For clasical music songs is a bad unit to use. I have on my iPhone "songs" which last from 15 seconds to 33 minutes. Jan 28, PM in response to wjosten In response to wjosten. I think that is exactly why Apple stopped saying how many song can be loaded because of the difference in storage space required between the various kinds of music. You guys have been very helpful with your suggestions.
It works on margins of error, but it throws more light into the topic. Jot down the length of the MP3 file in seconds and multiply it with the bitrate of the item.
Standard MP3 has kps, other files come in kps and kps. Next, take the product, and divide it by the answer of 8 multiplied by That will transfigure kilobits kb to megabytes MB.
That will generate a rough size of a song. Rather than beat your brains with the math for every file, guesstimate. On the premise that the average length of your file clocks at 4 minutes, apply the formula and multiply 4 by 60 for the total seconds.
The product is an approximation of 3. To calculate how many 3. If the math scares you off, just remember for MP3s with a bitrate of kps, a 1-minute file constitutes 1MB. The MP3 format embeds tags or album art. Although these resources take up insignificant real estate, they do add bulk to individual song sizes. For podcasts or other spoken-word tracks, files hammered out of stereo to mono eat up less space without diminishing sound quality.
Audio producers determine the format or bitrate for their oeuvre; if you want to shed some megabytes off your MP3 library, capitalize on dedicated software that exquisitely re-sizes files.
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