I believe you have misread the file size of your mp3s. I have hundreds of songs on my computer, but not a single one is less than a million bytes. I also have an mp3 of a computer voice saying "It's 10 o'clock AM." That file is 11,500 bytes.
In the interest of math I will temporarily disregard reality. There are 1024 bytes in a kilobyte, 1024 kilobytes in a megabyte, and 1024 megabytes in a gigabyte. Therefore the capacity of the player is 60 GB x 1024 MB/GB x 1024 kB/MB x 1024 B/kB, or 64,424,509,440 bytes. 64,424,509,440 bytes ÷ 400 bytes/song = 161,061,273.6 songs.
It depends on the size of the songs that you wnt to put on your phone. Each song has mb, bytes, gb etc... These play factor in adding up to 8GB.
It depends on how large your songs are, measured in megabytes. If 4gb mp3 player stores 800 songs of size 5mb each then 8gb mp3 player stores 1600 songs of size 5mb each. Its totaly depends on size of songs.
A gigabyte (GB) is commonly defined as 1,073,741,824 bytes in the binary (base two) system, which is calculated as (2^{30}). This is because a gigabyte is equal to 1024 megabytes, and each megabyte is 1024 kilobytes, with each kilobyte consisting of 1024 bytes. Therefore, 1 GB = 1024 x 1024 x 1024 bytes.
An MP3 player with 4 gigabytes of space will hold on average 1000 songs. The amount of songs that a 4 gigabyte MP3 player will hold depends on the size or length of each song; the average being close to three minutes.
32 Mb = 32,768Kb (multiply by 1024) 32 Mb = Not a whole lot of space nowadays 32 Mb = Fits about 8 songs on an MP3 player, less than one album for sure
40960 MB! Multiply 1024 by 40. Because each GB is 1024.
A gigabyte is 1 billion bytes, 1000 megabytes, and an mp3 song will range in size from 1 Mb to 7 or 8 Mb depending on the bit-rate (determines music quality). So from 100 to 200 songs would be average. The 4 Gb "Ipod Shuffle" estimates numbers in the "thousands" assuming a moderate bit-rate.
Certainly, the question poster meant 5,000,000 -- or 5 MB -- per song. One gigabyte (1GB) = 1,000 MB. So, 1000MB/5MB = 200 tunes. If the question writer really means 5,000 bytes (5KB) per song, well, then you can store 200,000 tunes!
Each byte has eight bits of information, i.e., either a 1 or a zero. A giga byte is 1,000,000,000 bytes of information or 1 GB.
Generally, it depends on how big the file of your music is. The bigger the music file, the less music files can be fit inside. The smaller the music files, the more music files can be fit inside the 256 mb mp3 player. To fit in more songs, I would suggest compressing the music files.
In the context of data storage, 1 gigabyte (GB) is equal to 1,073,741,824 bytes. Since each byte is a single unit of data, there are a total of 10,737,418,240 bytes in 10 GB. To determine the number of zeros in 10 GB, we need to count the number of zeros in this total byte value, which is 3 zeros.
The number of packets in a gigabyte (GB) depends on the size of each packet. For example, if you consider a typical Ethernet packet size of around 1500 bytes (including headers), there are approximately 682,667 packets in one gigabyte (1 GB = 1,073,741,824 bytes). However, if the packet size varies, the number of packets will change accordingly.