Depends on your compression software. Usaully with good software at the sacrifice of quality. 700 Megs for one hour.
it just depends on how much movement is going on, for example if there is an explosion every 5 minets its going to be alot but most of the time it will be about 1.5 gigabytes Slightly off. A film I made that was 1 hour and 7 minutes in length was 11 Gigabytes. So a 2 hour film would be from 15 Gigabytes to 22ish Gigabytes.
You can figure approximately 4.7 gigabytes for a 2 hour DVD and around 10 megabytes per second for a 3 minute video, on average. There's really too many factors to consider, like full video encoding or some other type of compression like DivX to take into consideration, so truthfully, it's hard to be exact. If you have them stored on your computer, go to the file, highlight it and right click. Then go to the properties tab and it'll tell you how large it is. Actually, ussualy a 2 hour movie(mp4 format) is about 0.8 gigabytes.(800 megabytes) And a music video is like 40 megabytes.
The amount of data used while listening to a 12-hour audiobook depends on the audio quality. On average, audiobooks use about 28-30 MB per hour with standard quality. So, listening to a 12-hour audiobook would use approximately 336-360 MB or 0.336-0.36 GB of data.
I find I get about 1 minute per MB, so 1 GB would be 1000 minutes. It really depends on the quality of the music you have. 96kbps will be a smaller file that 190kbps. However some of the quality is lost.
AVI is a real space hog and so is Window's Media format. But, probably one of the best ways of doing it would be to still go ahead and record in either of those formats and then get a converter program such as STIOK Video converter (tucows.com) and then convert it to Divx or some similar compression format. You can cut the file down quite a bit yet retain a `watchable picture'. The if you want to make a DVD or a VCD, it's possible to do ,although it can be a roundabout solution. with extra software. A lot of it will depend on your computer and the burners you have in the machine.
60
An hour is an unit of time. A gigabyte is an unit of computer memory. They can not be converted
Depends on your harddrive size and whether the movies are in HD. My DVR holds 100 hours of HD programming and is a smaller harddrive than the PS3 320 GB. Sites I reviewed said HD is about 1 GB per hour programming others said 1.5 GB so the PS3 320 GB could hold 200 to 300 hours of HD movies. Netflix is said to be about 2 GB an hour or so at the same site which would be less than 100 movies.
No One Really Know's, The Only Way You Could Find Out Is, Playing For An Hour, Then Checking Your Usages And See How Much Went Down
Gigabytes are a unit of storage, not a unit of rate. 10 GB per month = 14.2 MB per hour
about two one and a half hour movies. one DVD is around 4 gb
A few MB at most