Think of megapixels as horsepower or whatever - it basically measures resolution and not the number of pictures a memory card can hold. This depends on:
-The size photo chosen in the camera 'Menu' (eg from postcard size to A3)
-The size in kilobytes of the individual photo.
For example, my camera is set to take 4" x 6" photos, and the average size in kb would be less than 2000 , or 2Meg, so in theory this would easily give (256/2) = 128 photos.
(I Gigabyte is 1024 Meg or 1,024 x1,024 kb0. However, because each person's photos and likes and dislikes are different, yours will not be the same as mine. Select the dimmest photo of the size you are going to take and divide that into the memory-card size. (Darker photos take more kb.)
well, 1mp is 1 million bytes and 1gb is a billion bytes, you do the math...
It depends on the format of the images, but in JPEG, it's around 12 images.
Around 70 to 80 at high res JPGs.
About 6-8 photos.
1GB MEMORY CARD CAN HOLD 150 TO 200 SNAP IN A 13.6 MEGA PIXEL CAMERA.
How many pictures can a 4.0GB memory stick hold on a 12.0 mega pixel digital camera?
See the Question: How many pictures on 4GB memory card in 10.2 mega pixel digital camera?(How_many_pictures_on_4GB_memory_card_in_10.2_mega_pixel_digital_camera)
A camera with this pixel setting will have more room, but the images may not be as crisp as ones with a bigger pixel count. You can fit approximately 200 pictures of this kind on a 2 GB memory card.
417
Roughly 200.
256
It is recommended with a camera that is this sharp you have a minimum of a 1 gigabyte memory card. On this card you can fit approximately 56 pictures depending on the lighting and subject involved.
A 10 mp camera will take jpg files that are around 4 to 5 megabytes. Figuring on 4 megabytes per file, that's 2000/4 or around 500 photos on the outside range.
At 2mp's for 1gb, your memory card can hold at least 1,500 pictures. I had a 4mp camera with a 512 and that card holds over 700 photos. P.S. Why don't you start looking for another camera. the costs have come way down and an affordable camera costs about 175-300. If you would like a point-and-shoot camera, go with Canon. If you would like a lightweight ultra-telophoto zoom go with Kodak or Panasonic. If you would like a D-SLR go with Canon. There is a whole lot of stuff on the market, but you should probably upgrade from a 2 mega pixel camera to at least a 7 mega pixel camera and the results are incomparable and absolutely amazing. I shoot with 12.2 mega pixel and a 23.5 mega pixel, both make you feel like you are actually in the picture.
60000