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A single-sided, single-layer Blu-Ray disc can hold about 25 GB compared to the 4.7 GB of a single-sided, single-layer DVD.
A Blu-Ray is a spinning disc optical media used for the storage of lage amounts of data in a portable, typically read only format. CD's, DVD's, Laser disc's, VCD's and HD-DVD's all use(d) a red laser to read information stored on a spinning disc. Blu-Ray discs use a blue laser to read information stored on the discs. The frequency of a blue laser is much higher, allowing for the stored bits of data to be physically smaller, allowing form more information to be stored on a single disc. A single layer Blu-Ray disc stores about 25 GigaBytes of information. A double layer stores about twice that. You need a Blu-Ray reader orplayer in order to read or play a Blu-Ray disc. The technology is patented by the Sony Corporation, and is present in the Playstation 3 console.
5 times more
A single layer Blu-Ray disc holds up to a maximum of 25 GB. A double layer holds a maximum of 50 GB
Less than a TeraByte Regards steve jobs CEO-Apple Inc
A Standard CD is 700MB whereas a single layer bluray is 25GB, doubled to 50GB for a dual layer, 100Gb for a triple layer and even 128Gb for a quadruple layer disk.
Up to 50GB, which is 5 times more than a single DVD
that depends on how much is stored on it. if you are talking audio the data consumption is approximately 1 megabyte for each minute of audio data. and older cd's had a limit of 650 megabytes data/74 minutes of music. the newer ones have the capacity of 700 megabytes/80 minutes.
as much as it says on it ANOTHER OPINION : Compact Disc (CD) can hold 740 MB. Digital Video Disc (DVD) can hold 4.7 GB. Usually says on the disc itself.
5 times more data. A Blu-Ray's maximum storage data is 50GB
There is no limit of how many food you can store but there is a limit of Hitpoints it heals: 12. So basically you can store any food that adds up to 12 HP in there. Example: 4 Shrimps - 1 cornucopia.
Because it would be more hardship to half fill the first disc. It would be impossible to fit a file as large as this game onto a single disc. So after a disc is filled the remainder of the file will be put onto the next disc, then the next if required, and so on. So the latter part of the file will always be on the last disc. It's all down to the file size. It can't really be helped as to how much of the game goes onto which disc.