An audio CD typically can hold up to 700 MB.
An audio CD typically can hold up to 700 MB.
A factory made audio CD, like any other CD will hold 700 MB of data. However, for the purpose of minimizing errors in large scale production, they are not usually filled to their maximum capacity.
Yes, a bit is the smallest unit of data and can have a value of either 0 or 1. Other units like byte, kilobyte, and megabyte are made up of multiple bits.
There are uncountable types of USB flash drives, with sizes from 512MB to 256GB!
One megabyte (MB) is made up of 1,024 kilobytes (KB). The next measurement up is a gigabyte (GB), which is made up of 1024MB. The most popular plans offered by mobile phone companies are 1GB, 2GB or 5GB of mobile data allowance. But deals can start as low as 100MB depending on your needs
A standard CD-R is a 1.2 mm thick disc made of polycarbonate with a 120 mm or 80 mm diameter. The 120 mm disc has a storage capacity of 74 minutes of audio or 650 MiB of data. CD-R/RWs are also available with capacities of 79 minutes, 59 seconds and 74 frames (marketed as 80 minutes) / 736,966,656 bytes (702 MiB), which they achieve by molding the disc at the tightest allowable tolerances specified in the Orange Book CD-R/CD-RW standards. The engineering margin that was reserved for manufacturing tolerance has been used for data capacity instead, leaving no tolerance for manufacturing--for these discs to truly be compliant with the Orange Book standard, the manufacturing process must be perfect.
A milibyte is not a standard unit of measurement in computing. The standard units used to measure data storage are byte, kilobyte, megabyte, gigabyte, etc. It is possible that "milibyte" is a misspelling or a made-up term.
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No. A DVD is a DVD, a CD is a CD. The two are cpletely different formats and use different wavelengths, so a CD player is incapable of reading a DVD. A DVD player can read CDs only because it can be made to operate at the other wavelength to read CDs. a CD holds 700 MB / 80 minutes of audio, whereas a DVD can hold 4700 million bytes / 4483 MB / 4.38 GB.
The amount may very, but most of the ones made recently are 700 mb.
Phone calls made using MagicJack typically use a moderate amount of data, roughly similar to other VoIP services. On average, a standard voice call may consume about 0.5 to 1 MB of data per minute. This means that while it does use data, calls are generally manageable for most internet plans, especially if you're connected to Wi-Fi. However, it's always best to monitor your data usage if you're on a limited plan.