A video usually has a few MB per minute; exactly how much will depend a lot on the quality of the video.
The length of a 600 MB video can vary significantly based on the video codec, resolution, and bitrate. For example, a 600 MB video at a standard bitrate of around 5 Mbps may be approximately 10-15 minutes long. However, if the video is encoded at a lower bitrate, it could be longer, while a higher bitrate would result in a shorter duration.
The length of a 500 MB video can vary significantly depending on the video's resolution, frame rate, compression method, and audio quality. As a rough estimate, a 500 MB video could be anywhere from a few minutes to over an hour in length. To determine the exact duration of a 500 MB video, you would need to know the specific technical details of the video file.
Usually it can be your internet connection, how long the video(s) are and how much KB/MB it is (:
About 500 Mb in reasonable quality video.
As long as the motherboard has a compatible expansion slot, yes.
What makes a video a Mega Byte (MB) ?? Definitely need clarification on what you are trying to ask here.
1 gb video held in 1024 mb
A Skype video call download is about 10 MB per minute. This would equate to about 600 MB an hour.
I have a DV520 Camcorder, It will only video for 2 minutes.
of course not, a movie needs at least 1GB of memory, it also depends on how long is your movie, if it's a clip or a little video then 256MB is enough.
It depends on the quality of the video.
That really depends a lot on the video's size and quality. Take a sample of a video in the desired quality, and look how many MB it takes, and for how many minutes it plays. From there, you can extrapolate. (1 GB = 1024 MB)