To help us understand the currency units better, you will need to know both "Shillings" and "Rupees" currency units being used in certain countries.
Several countries use 'Shillings" currency unit as listed below:
Kenya Shillings (KES)
Somalia Shillings (SOS)
Tanzania Shillings (TZS)
Uganda Shillings (UGX)
In additional, several countries use 'Rupees" currency unit as listed below:
India Rupees (INR)
Sri Lanka Rupees (LKR)
Nepal Rupees (NPR)
Pakistan Rupees (PKR)
Mauritius Rupees (MUR)
Seychelles Rupees (SCR)
You can look up the currency rates from http://currate.com site
To answer this question, both Kenya Shillings (KES) and India Rupees (INR) currency units are used.
Today's rate (6/23/09)
24.88 Kenya Shillings (KES) = 15.3478 India Rupees (INR)
0.03
50
If you divide the 2488 parts by the 8 hours, then you get information about how many parts are produced every hour - assuming, of course, that this unit rate is constant.
60 rupees
You would have 1853.2 billion rupees.
1 million rupees is 1,000,000 rupees
1 Lac rupees = 100000 rupees
How Many Rupees?=I don't think they have made that many rupees !=
40 rupees
57 rupees
1 million rupees is exactly equal to 1 million rupees.
Absolutely you can record drums with the Tascam 2488. The Tascam 2488 is actually a pretty powerful machine. As a owner of three 2488's, I've recorded many drum tracks during my years of recording. The tascam 2488 has plenty of power & should be able to handle most drum recording applications. The most important functions that you will probably be using to record drums are, "compression" & "EQ". The compression is setup very nicely for such an affordable machine. There may be some room to improve in the EQ department - but what the machine offers will get the job done. Each track also has polarity switching which can be very helpful for projects with multiple tracks. It's often that I will record up-to 8 drum tracks simultaneously on the 2488. So yes, the Tascam 2488 should easily handle your drum recording needs.