you will have a smaller file at the expense of quality... converting any audio file from it original encoding to a lower rate will degrade the quality of the audio and in most cases adds hum/fuzz/static
According to the official song storage capacity on Apple.com, an 8 gb iPod Touch can hold 1,750 songs. However, it really depends on the length of your songs, and the kbps your music is set at. If your songs are mostly about 3 minutes, and your songs are at 128kbps, then you should be able to hold about 2700 songs. If your songs are 4 minutes long then you can hold about 2030 songs. 96 kbps, at 3 mins: 3610 songs 128 kbps, at 3 mins: 2700 songs 160 kbps, at 3 mins: 2170 songs 192 kbps, at 3 mins:1810 songs 224 kbps, at 3 mins:1550 songs 256 kbps, at 3 mins:1350 songs 320 kbps, at 3 mins: 1080 songs The higher the kbps, the better the sound quality, but 128 kbps sounds perfect on Ipods.
To convert kilobits per second (kbps) to megabytes, you first convert kbps to kilobytes per second (kBps) by dividing by 8 (since there are 8 bits in a byte). Then, divide by 1,024 to convert kilobytes to megabytes. So, 5682 kbps is approximately 0.684 megabytes per second (MBps).
To convert megabits (Mb) to kilobits per second (kbps), you multiply by 1,000. Therefore, 2.5 Mb is equal to 2,500 kbps.
54Mbps =54*1000 kbps (In actual 1KB=1024bytes) =54000 kbps =54000/8 KBps =6750 KBps (1Byte=8bits or 1B=8b) 54Mbps =54*1000 kbps (In actual 1KB=1024bytes) =54000 kbps =54000/8 KBps =6750 KBps (1Byte=8bits or 1B=8b)
It depends on the quality of the songs. The higher the quality, the more space it will take up. Say each song is 128 kbps (without being a FLAC file -- THE highest quality, the highest for an mp3 is 320 kbps), 908 songs will take up around 4 GB if they are 3-5 MB each.
14,000 songs in 128-Kbps AAC format.
To convert kilobits per second (kbps) to megabits per second (Mbps), you divide by 1,000. Therefore, 6,500 kbps is equal to 6.5 Mbps.
To convert megabits per second (Mbps) to kilobits per second (kbps), you multiply by 1,000. Therefore, 1.88 Mbps is equal to 1,880 kbps.
To convert kilobits per second (kbps) to megabits per second (Mbps), you divide by 1,000. Therefore, 506 kbps is equal to 0.506 Mbps.
According to the official song storage capacity on Apple.com, an 8 gb iPod Touch can hold 1,750 songs. However, it really depends on the length of your songs, and the kbps your music is set at. If your songs are mostly about 3 minutes, and your songs are at 128kbps, then you should be able to hold about 2700 songs. If your songs are 4 minutes long then you can hold about 2030 songs. 96 kbps, at 3 mins: 3610 songs 128 kbps, at 3 mins: 2700 songs 160 kbps, at 3 mins: 2170 songs 192 kbps, at 3 mins:1810 songs 224 kbps, at 3 mins:1550 songs 256 kbps, at 3 mins:1350 songs 320 kbps, at 3 mins: 1080 songs The higher the kbps, the better the sound quality, but 128 kbps sounds perfect on Ipods.
The number of songs a 1 GB USB thumb drive can hold varies based on the file format and bitrate of the songs. On average, a typical MP3 file at 128 kbps is about 1 MB per song, allowing for around 800 songs on a 1 GB drive. If the songs are of higher quality, such as 320 kbps, you might fit around 250 to 300 songs. Thus, the capacity can range significantly depending on the audio quality.
To convert megabits per second (Mbps) to kilobits per second (kbps), you multiply the value by 1,000, since there are 1,000 kilobits in a megabit. Therefore, 400 Mbps is equal to 400,000 kbps.