A standard single-layer DVD has a capacity of about 4.7 GB, which typically translates to approximately 120 minutes of video at standard quality. However, this can vary based on the video compression used and the quality of the video. For higher quality or longer videos, the duration could be less, while lower quality settings could allow for more content.
Disc nameCapacityCD … 7474 minutes of uncompressed audio or ≈650.3 MiB of data (681984000 bytes).CD … 8080 minutes of uncompressed audio or ≈703.1 MiB of data (737280000 bytes).CD … 9090 minutes of uncompressed audio or ≈791.0 MiB of data (829440000 bytes). Disc size cannot be detected automatically and disc needs to be burned using the "Overburn" option.CD … 9999 minutes of uncompressed audio or ≈870.1 MiB of data (912384000 bytes). Disc size cannot be detected automatically and disc needs to be burned using the "Overburn" option.DVD-R (DVD-5)4.7 GB ≈ 4.38 GiB 1) of data (4707319808 bytes).DVD+R (DVD-5)4.7 GB ≈ 4.38 GiB 2) of data (4700372992 bytes).DVD … DL (DVD-9)8.5 GB ≈ 7.95 GiB of data (8543666176 bytes).HD-DVD Single Layer15 GB ≈ 14.0 GiB of data (15076554752 bytes).HD-DVD Dual Layer30 GB ≈ 31.1 GiB of data (33393473536 bytes).BD Single Layer25 GB ≈ 23.3 GiB of data (25025314816 bytes).BD Dual Layer50 GB ≈ 46.6 GiB of data (50050629632 bytes).
A High Definition Digital Versatile Disc or HD-DVD holds 15 GB per layer (a regular DVD holds 4.7 GB per layer)
DVD-5 is an acronym that means a DVD disc that is one-sided single-layer disc and can contain upto 4.38 gigabytes of data on it.DVD-9 is one form of DVD discs that means a single-sided dual-layer DVD disc. DVD-9 can hold approximately 7.95 gigabytes of data
when we're talking about DVD movies thinking in terms of how many bytes is pretty rediculous. a very short DVD quality movie will be measured at least in tens of mega-bytes (Mb). one megabyte is equal to 1,048,576 bytes. so, if you were, for instance, thinking in terms of how many bytes there were in a full-length DVD quality feature film then you would be talking about gigabytes(Gb). one Gb is equal to 1,073,741,824 bytes. you need between 1 and 3 gigs of space for a whole DVD worth of information.
A DVD-ROM is a general term describing any DVD medium that cannot be written to by end-users.To answer your question in another way: there are a lot of different types of DVD. Types most commonly found are mini-DVD's (1.4 GB), dual-layer mini-DVD's (2.6 GB), DVD-R/+R/-RW/+RW (4.7 GB), DVD-DL/DVD9 (8.5 GB) or DVD-RAM (4.7 or 9.4 GB depending on single or dual layers).
Minutes is a unit of time GB is a unit of space on a hard drive
These two units are not compatible for conversion; minutes is time, gigabytes (GB) is computer memory.
Gigabytes has no connection with time.
4 million minutes
A DVD-ROM is a general term describing any DVD medium that cannot be written to by end-users.To answer your question in another way: there are a lot of different types of DVD. Types most commonly found are mini-DVD's (1.4 GB), dual-layer mini-DVD's (2.6 GB), DVD-R/+R/-RW/+RW (4.7 GB), DVD-DL/DVD9 (8.5 GB) or DVD-RAM (4.7 or 9.4 GB depending on single or dual layers).
Each single-layer DVD can hold up to 4.7 GB.
120 min MP3-quality music: 170 MB120 min CD-quality music: 1200 MB (1.2 GB)120 min internet-quality video: 1200 MB120 min DVD-quality video: 6000 MB (6 GB)All numbers are approximate.