If one Movie Take 1x A Full Dvd At Block Buster Store Then You Might Be able to Condense them into a Different Format Like DivX then Be able to place about 4 or 5 movie on 8 Gigabyte Card.. But just barely.
it can hold about 5-10 hours depending on video resolution.
If you're lucky you may get 30 seconds out of it. If you do not have at least a 2 gb card you should not rely on it to shoot any video at all.
I believe it covers a lot. I don't know exactly how much, but its a lot! Believe me.
The amount of video that can be stored on 300 GB depends on the video's resolution and compression. For instance, standard definition video (480p) may take up about 500 MB per hour, allowing roughly 600 hours of video. In contrast, high definition (1080p) video can require around 3 GB per hour, resulting in approximately 100 hours of video. Therefore, the storage capacity varies significantly based on the quality and format of the video files.
A 2 GB memory card will hold 30 minutes of HD video or 50 minutes of standard quality video. The actual amount of record time varies greatly based on the camera and its recording method.
a psp can hold 64gb card or 34 gb card
1 gb video held in 1024 mb
It's the same with all storage media. The card has a hidden 'reference' file on it - to tell the computer what kind of card it is, and how much data can be stored. This data file uses up a small amount of the card's memory, and is quite normal.
Depending on the DVD you may have: 4.7 GB (single-sided, single-layer - common) (Two hours of high quality video) 8.5-8.7 GB (single-sided, double-layer) (3.5 hours of high quality video) 9.4 GB (double-sided, single-layer) (4 hours of high quality video) 17.08 GB (double-sided, double-layer - rare) (8 hours of high quality video) Double sided disks can be written on both sides, which is why they hold about twice as much.
Yes, it does. Actually at this point number of processor can go over 1 thousand (depending on nature of processors). And, yes it does have own memory. Latest video cards can have as much as 4 GB.
With XP, recommend 2-3 GB (generally the 3GB is the max you can access no matter how much you have). If you have Vista 32 you can use 3-4 GB. Vista 64 will support much more (I think 32 GB, but am not sure), however, unless you have very intensive applications, recommend 4 GB. Also, you want to look at your video card. Ensure you have at least 512MB video memory -- for games and graphics intensive applications (e.g. AutoCAD), get as much video capacity as you can afford.
Good for XP or Vista. Processor: Core 2 Duo 3.0 Ghz or so. Video Card: I Recommend any 1 Gb video card (Use Nvidia for Best Quality Gaming Experience) Memory: I Recommend 2gb for XP; 4 Gb for Vista. DirectX: 10.0 version HDD: will use as much 10 Gb or so. Hope it helps, Thanks!