Two gigabytes includes about two thousand megabytes. Two gigabytes is a unit of memory, not time.
If you are talking about video, it greatly depends on what format you are storing it in.
The storage space per minute varies a lot depending on the quality of the sound; but for a typical MP3, you can calculate about a MB per minute. That would give you about 30 MB for half an hour; in other words, much less than one GB.
You mean how many zeros in a gigabyte, the answer is 9 as a gigabyte is written as 1,000,000,000 which is one thousand million
The word is gigabytes. A gigabyte is 1024 x 1024 x 1024 bytes. One gigabyte is enough to store about a billion letters of plain text, or a million photographs, or a thousand minutes of music in decent MP3 format.
How Many GB in 550000KB
Movies come in different qualities; the amount of kilobytes or megabytes per minute can vary widely. I suggest you get a sample of a movie in the desired quality, and divide the file size by the number of minutes, to get an idea. For your calculations, note that 1 Gigabyte = 1024 Megabytes - which you can round to 1000 for most practical purposes.
These two units are not compatible for conversion; minutes is time, gigabytes (GB) is computer memory.
Gigabytes has no connection with time.
30 minutes i think
Minutes is a unit of time GB is a unit of space on a hard drive
4 million minutes
7 pentasong
1080
Two.
about 500 minutes
No. The two things measure different things and conversion from one to another is not valid.
A gigabyte is a unit of information (storage), whereas minutes are time, so they aren't comparable directly. One gigabyte means either one billion bytes, or 2^30 =1073741824 bytes (often called a gibibyte, the "bi" meaning binary, so a giga-binary-byte). Each byte is made up of 8 bits where a bit can be one of two values, such as 1 or 0, or true or false, or yes or no. If you mean "how many minutes of music" or "how many minutes of video" can fit in one gigabyte, that depends. A simple rule of thumb is that using modern compression, 1 megabyte (1/1000th of a gigabyte) can store about one minute of music, or about 7 seconds of standard-definition video, or around 2.5 seconds of high-definition video (both video types including their corresponding audio tracks) . So, 1 gigabyte can store about 1,000 minutes (16 hours, 40 minutes) of music, or about 1.94 hours (1 hour, 53 minutes) of standard-def video, or about 33 minutes of hi-def video.
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