The Only possible way you can do this is by Editing the ratio and the size of the movie so if it is 640 by 480 you could convert it to 320 by 240 and the video size will be smaller.You need to use a video editing program such as Sony Vegas or you may also use a free option like Windows Movie Maker.
NOTE:
The quality will not change but if you make the video full-screen you will notice a loss of quality.
0.4gb
Depending on the length of the movie and the compression/quality, anywhere from 400MB to over 1GB is usual. 2 Hours usually takes up two slots in a folder.
4gb
possibly firewire. its 400mb/sec
It depends on the size of the video. Most videos range from 400MB-700MB.
The duration that 400MB lasts depends on your internet usage. For instance, streaming music typically consumes about 40MB per hour, so you could listen for about 10 hours. However, streaming video can use significantly more data, with standard definition consuming around 700MB per hour and high definition up to 3GB per hour. Therefore, 400MB might only last a few minutes for high-definition video streaming, but much longer for browsing or social media.
Helo.They are 1394a &1394b. Max speed in 1394a is 400Mb/s، but max spee in 1394bis 800Mb/s.
The system requirements for dynamics CRM are as follows: at least 1GB RAM(although Microsoft recommends 2GB RAM or more),Dual 1.8 GHZ processor(such as an Intel Xeon P4), and a hard disk of 400MB.
Not by a long shot. I think the a low estimate for a film is maybe 400mb. (Probably 3 or more times that). This means it is min. 400,000 kilobytes, so way more than what you've proposed.
this is a Approximate. 1hr MP4 @ V.700kbs A.128kbs = 800mB 4096/800 ~= 5 So about 5 one hour long music Videos on a 4gb ipod nano. Lower bitrates = Less space. So, .... 1hr MP4 @ V.300kbs A.96kbs = 400mB 4096/400 ~= 10 Something like this would provide lower quality, but saves space.
esata is faster, running upto 3GB/s where as FireWire400 (G1) can only run speeds of theoretical 400Mb/s and FireWire800 (G2) theoretical speeds of 800Mb/s
It depends on the definition and quality of the videos - i.e., how many pixels high and wide the video is, how compressed the pictures and sound are, what format the videos are encoded in and of course, how long the videos last. For example, a half hour 720p wide-screen video in HD with good quality sound in Windows .WMV format will come out at around 400Mb, so you would get 5 like that into 2Gb. On the other hand, a half hour video of say 360 pixels wide by 240 high, well compressed, in the same format might be less than 50Mb, so you'd get around 40 of those into 2gb. If you want to save high quality feature films in full 1920 x 1080p HD in a "lossless" format, you won't get one full one into 2gb.