A standard CD (Compact Disc) holds approximately 700 MB of data. This capacity allows it to store around 80 minutes of audio or various types of files. However, there are variations like CD-ROMs and CD-RWs that can have similar or slightly different capacities.
Normal audio CDs hold 700 megabytes of data.
CDs- can only hold up to 700 megabytes of storageDVDs- can hold up to 4.7 gigabytes of storage (4,812.8 megabytes)
Certainly. CDs and CD-RWs usually hold between 650 and 700 Mb of data.
Standard 120 mm CDs typically hold 650-700 MB of data (74-80 minutes of audio) depending on the CDs and the drives used. The legend behind why 74 minutes was chosen was because one of the developers wanted the entire Beethoven Ninth symphony to fit on a single disc. Mini CDs (3" or 80 mm) hold about 185 - 210 MB.
700Mb. But it depends on the quality sometimes there are cheap cds with 650mb
It depends on the file format and length of the audio tracks. Generally, a standard CD typically holds about 700 MB of data, while 1 GB is equal to 1000 MB. So, roughly 1 GB would be equivalent to around 1.43 CDs.
No. 2.11 GB is much too large. You would need at least three (3) 700 MB CDs to hold that much data.
= How many photos can 19 MB hold at 12 megapixels? =
A standard CD-ROM can typically hold up to 700 MB of data. There are also variations, such as Mini CDs, which hold less, and some high-capacity formats like DVDs and Blu-ray discs, which can store significantly more data. However, for traditional CD-ROMs, 700 MB is the standard capacity.
It can hold about 1GB to 8GB.
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Saying that the average song is about 5.0 megabytes, it would take about 2,500 megabytes to hold 500 songs.