Typical capacity of a CD is nominally 700MB, and is usually a few MB higher.
A CD has a capacity of about 650 MB.
An audio CD typically can hold up to 700 MB.
An audio CD typically can hold up to 700 MB.
A 63-minute CD could hold about 551mb.
A 63-minute CD could hold about 551mb.
A 63-minute CD could hold about 551mb.
1 CD's maximum capacity of storage is 700 MB 1000 MB = 1 GB 10 CD's would be 7,000 MB = 7 GB 50 CD's = 35,000 MB = 35 GB 100 CD's = 70,000 MB = 70 GB 500 CD's = 350,000 MB = 350 GB You now need to work out 150 GB, which is 200 CD's + abit exta. 200 CD's = 140,000 MB = 140 GB + 10 GB (the extra) = 7,000 MB = 7 GB GRAND TOTAL: 710 CD's = 497,000 MB = 497-500 GB <it is impossible to put equal CD's in 500 GB>
About 100 to 150. The average MP3 file is about 4.0 Megabytes. A CD stores 640 Megabytes.
About 700 Mb I think
a terabyte is 1000 gigabytes, a cd normally is around 700-800 Mb. this means a 800 Mb cd is 0,78125 of a Gb, thus in one tb 0,78125*1000= 781 cd's will fit
The amount may very, but most of the ones made recently are 700 mb.
There are varying amounts of bytes on different types of CDs. There is no fixed or allowed number of megabytes on one CD. The general pattern is: the more money the CD is worth, the more memory is available on the CD. The average is around 700 mb, but it can differ greatly.