about 40 megabytes in a uncompressed file, like in a 16 bit 44khz wave format(.wav).
For MP3 encoded at 128k samples per second, around 4 Mbytes.
A song is usually 8 MB big.
The typical 3-4 minute song can be around 5-7 megabytes. Usually, only one song can fit into an eight megabyte space, but if two songs are very short (around a minute), you can fit two songs.
It depends on how long the song is and what quality and compression you have it in. An average 3 - 4 minute song in average quality will be around 3MB or 0.003GB
I find that a good quality stereo MP3 will take about 1Mb per minute
A MP3 song, uses an average of 2 to 4 Megabytes.
it all depends on the bit rate and length of song. bit rates can vary greatly. usually from 64 to 192kbps (kilo bits per second) but can be as high as 1000 i ripped all my cds into my pc at 128kbps which is about average. the higher the bitrate then better the quality but also the larger the file. at 128 kbps it is roughly a minute a megabyte... a 3 1/2 minute song is about 3.5 mb at 128kbps same 3 1/2 minute song at 196kbps is 5 mb i have over 8000 mp3s on my pc. some downloaded from internet with varying bit rates and some ripped from my cds and my average file size is about 4-5 mb
A couple megabytes for a 4-5 minute song from iTunes. The quality can be improved causing it to take up more space or decreased to take up less.
The size of an mp3 file will vary depending upon the length of the song and the amount of compression used. A higher level of compression will mean poorer sound quality but a smaller file size. In general an average three minute song at an acceptable sound quality will be around 4 or 5MB.
A bit of a stupid question to ask. About 1/4 of a song.
It depends on the mp3 bitrate, encoding type, and song length. A conservative estimate using a fixed 256k bitrate and 4.5 minute average song length gives 7.5 MB per MP3 file, or 465 MB per month. A more realistic estimate might be more like 5.0 MB per MP3, using 192k encoding, a 4 minute song average, and about 10% shrinkage due to vbr encoding. This gives 310 MB per month. The short answer, probably somewhere between 310 MB and 465 MB per month.
There is no standard conversion between minutes and megabytes. For a fairly high-quality MP3 file, you can estimate about one minute per megabyte. For low, but still acceptable, quality, you can get more. For instance, the German courses from Deutsche Welle have about 4-5 minutes for each megabyte. For even a low-quality movie you can expect several megabytes for every minute.
A lot. But the things that use up the most are: 1. Videos (I'd say 5 mb a minute), 2. Music (3 mb a minute), 3. GIFS (2 mb a minute), 4. High quality images (1 mb per picture), 5. Normal images (0.5 mb a picture), 6. Text posts (0.1 mb every 100 words). This is approximate though.