It all depends on what type of camera you use or what type of photo you save. If your camera is lets say 5 mega pixels, we would do 5x3=15. The three come from the three colors in any picture on you screen. In total the image would round up to 15MB size.
Do note that images can be compressed into smaller sizes but later on you would have to uncompress them.
Over 3000.
The content of the picture and what "Quality" level you are using affects how many pictures a memory card will hold. A 2 GB card in a 7.2 MP camera will hold something like 800 pictures on medium quality and 400 pictures on high quality.
411 pictures at the highest resolution - I just bought a sony cybershot and a 2gb card, and my husband was able to look in the menu of the camera to see exactly how many pictures were left.
You can figure it out by dividing 2GB (2 billion) by 12MP (12 million) which works out to roughly 167 photos. The camera compresses the photo data, so you will actually get more photos (something like 200 photos I would guess)
The capacity of a card indicates the maximum amount of data that can be stored (less some space for the card's own use).Megapixel (MP) count refers to the maximum resolution of the camera's sensor -- its ability to record detail. The number of images that can be recorded on a card of a given size is only indirectly related to the capacity of the card, which is measured in Kilobytes (KB) or Megabytes (MB), not MP. That will vary according to the image itself, and to the camera's settings.For example: My Pentax K10D, with a 10.1 MP sensor and using a 4 GB card, will record approximately 821 images at the highest resolution (10 MP) and a "Fine" resolution setting. The same camera, with the same sensor and same card, will record 10,000-plus images at the lowest resolution (2 MP) and the "Low" resolution setting. Practically all cameras have this ability to change the resolution settings, and thus the sizes of the image files that are stored on the card.So, you can see that it is only possible to answer your question in very general terms: The higher the capacity of the card, the more images you can store at whatever camera settings. And, as you can see above, even at the highest settings with a high MP count, you can take a lot of pictures!One thing to think about: storage cards can and do fail. It is better to have two 1 GB cards than one 2 GB card, unless you plan to shoot a whole lot of video. That way if one fails, you can keep shooting and worry about retrieving the images off the other card later.
It depends upon the MP of your camera. The more the MP the higher the quality of the photo, and so the no of pictures that can be stored reduces. For ex, for a 2MP camera, you can store 2379 photos on a 2GB card, whereas for a 8MP camera you can only store 635 photos.
200
417
It depends on the camera.
512 TO 20,000
there is info on this link provider by a company that makes cards. probably about the same for cards of same sizes http://www.lexar.com/digfilm/capacity_chart.html
Over 3000.
The number of color pictures that can be stored on a 2GB memory card will vary depending on the megapixels and file size of the photo. It can vary between 1430 photos when the photos are 4 MP and have a file size of 1.2 MB to 260 photos when the photos are 22 MP and have a file size of 6.6 MB.
It depends on the quality of pictures you take, but with a 2GB card you should be able to store around 500 or 600 photos.
it depends on your image quality. RAW images you will not be able to take as many, while JPEG you can take many more.
In general, Nintendo DS games vary from 16MB to 256MB depending on the type of game. Thus the amount of games store in a 2GB micro SD card would depend on the size of the game stored. On average, roughly 20 games can be stored in a 2GB micro SD card. It depends on the size of games. Usually, a 2GB MicroSD card an store 4 to 10 geams to run on R4i sdhc card.
More than 7000 jpg. Exact no great vary with file format, compression level etc...