It depends on the voltage. WH = Watt Henry, mAH = milliamp Henry, watts = amps * volts and milliamps= 1000 * amps. Thus the conversion is: mAH = 1000 * WH / V, where V is the voltage. I'm looking at the battery for my Dell Studio and it's rated 85WH and 11.1V. So it's 1000 * 85 / 11.1 = 7658 mAH, so in this case 85WH is better than 6600 maH. If we solve 1000 * 85 / V = 6600, we get V = 12.9. When converting from WH, the bigger the voltage the lower the mAH. So for voltages bigger than 12.9 V, 6600mAH is better than 85WH. Hope this helps.
About 11 minutes
6600, 6700, 6800, 6900 inclusive 6700 and 6800 exclusive
Geforce 6600 is the better one.
About 8000-19500 mAh at 1.5V
Do you mean 6600mAh? In relation to a battery this would mean a capacity of 6600 milli-Ampere hours. In other words the battery can supply 6600mA for 1 hour.
up to 5 hours max depending on laptop battery consumption rate
no
The second one should roughly last twice as long as the first one. You can't really say how long as it depends what you are using the computer for, but whatever you are doing the second one will always last about twice as long.
mAh is a rating of a battery's capacity. A 4400 mAh battery is capable of delivering 4.4 amps of current for one hour. A 6600 mAh battery is capable of delivering 6.6 amps for one hour. That is not to say that both batteries will only last for one hour, since the laptop will probably draw less current than that. The important thing to notice is that the 6600 mAh battery has 50% more capacity than the 4400 mAh battery. If battery life is your #1 priority, the larger battery would be a good choice. However, it may be larger and heavier than the 4400 mAh battery. If a small, lightweight laptop is #1 priority, the smaller battery might be better. Also, if the laptop will not be unplugged, on the go all the time, the smaller battery might be a better choice due to it being cheaper. As all things engineering, there are compromises to be made.
I think YES
6600 as a fraction= 6600/1