when we're talking about DVD movies thinking in terms of how many bytes is pretty rediculous.
a very short DVD quality movie will be measured at least in tens of mega-bytes (Mb).
one megabyte is equal to 1,048,576 bytes. so, if you were, for instance, thinking in terms of how many bytes there were in a full-length DVD quality feature film then you would be talking about gigabytes(Gb). one Gb is equal to 1,073,741,824 bytes.
you need between 1 and 3 gigs of space for a whole DVD worth of information.
usually a dvd is 4.7 gigabytes which is 5.04659e9 bytes
A single layered single sized DVD can hold 4.7 GB of data. A dual layer DVD can hold 8.5 GB of data.
As many as a potato can.
hotdogs thousand
A DVD holds 4.7 GB = 4,700,000,000 bytes. (Actually something exact like 4,700,372,992 bytes.) A kilobyte is 1000 bytes, so a DVD holds 4,700,000 kilobytes.
A Blu-Ray disc can hold up to a maximum of 50 GB of data, which is 5 times more than a DVD can hold
Approx 700MB, or 700,000,000 bytes.
810,000
1 MB (megabyte) = 1048576 bytes (2^20)
2048 bytes
100000000000 100000000000 100000000000
Depends on how many bytes it has
25 giga bytes single layer50 giga bytes dual layerBlu-Ray can hold up to a maximum of 50 GB, which is 5 times more data than a DVD can hold
A DVD can hold up to 4.7 Mb.
Impossible to answer, the internet keeps on growing.