It depends on a few things.
1. Exactly how high is the resolution? 5 MP (which would be about 2600, 2000 pixels), 10 MP, 20 MP? Depending on its intended use, the relative term "high resolution" could mean a number of things. It could even mean 1 MP depending on the situation.
2. What format is the picture in? For example, TIFF, various RAW formats, and Jpeg are all common for photographs. What is the source and what is the format? TIFFs are huge files, RAW files are very big, and jpegs, the most common, are reasonably small. (RAW files straight out of an SLR are about three times the size of a jpeg.)
3. If it is jpeg, what is the compression level (between 1 and 12, or between 1% and 100%)? For example, a 5 MP image with high-quality compression (like 100% or level 12) could take up a couple megabites, while the same picture at a lower compression of 5 could be about 400 KB. A compression of level 10 is fairly common out of cameras, and a 5 MP photograph with level 10 compression could be just over 1 MB.
4. To a lesser extent, how complex is the picture? For example, a solid black background with a yellow smily face would take up less room than a complex, sharp photograph of a forrest.
So, to take assumptions, a 10 MP jpeg at level 10 JPEG compression of a typical picture could be about 3 MB.
It should be noted that the picture takes up no more room on a memory card than it does on a computer hard drive. However, if you want to know what portion of the memory card is used by the photo, it depends on the size of the card. For a typical 512 MB memory card and the example of a 3 MB file size photo, the photo would take up about 1/170th of the card.
Of course, any of my assumed variables can be very different resulting in a very different storage usage.
The Canon PowerShot A630 has a maximum resolution of 8.0 megapixels. The higher the resolution of a picture, the more space is taken up on the memory card.
If your digital photo frame has a memory card then it can be read.Many readers will handle all the common types of cards.
if you have a photo printer you can stick the memory card in there or put it in your camera and connect your camera to the computer
The 8MB memory card. 8Mb= 8192Kb
This is relative to your camera's settings (specifically its resolution) as well as the amount of internal memory your camera has and the size of your memory card.
1GB memory card has more space. The capacity of the memory cards are various, such as, 16MB 32MB. There are lots of memory cards on this website: http://www.dinodirect.com/Wii-Accessories/Wii-Memory-Cards/ You can have a look.
For the GNOME based versions (non Lite): 700 MHz x86 processor 3GB of Hard Drive space 376 MB of system memory (RAM) Graphics card capable of 640x480 resolution Sound card For the LXDE based versions (Lite): 266 MHz x86 processor 2GB of Hard Drive space 128 MB of system memory (RAM) Graphics card capable of 640x480 resolution Sound card
With a memory card you have a larger amount of memory on your phone. However much is on the memory card. So more space to hold pics and etc.
Photosmart D7560, A636 Compact Photo Printer, HP A536 Compact Photo Printer are just a few HP printers that have memory card slots.
The maximum memory on a sim card is memory is 64k. Therefore the Sim card does not have enough memory to store any high resolution images. You could store a small series of low resolution images, but this would be little more than an animated Gif like animation.
If you need to transfer photo files from a computer to a memory card, you can use a card reader slot if available on the computer (specially many laptops these days have card slots) or you can use an external USB card reader to transfer photos or any other data to and from a memory card. - Neeraj Sharma
Maybe. Take it into a camera shop and ask them to do a card recovery. Sometimes they can retrieve the images. Another way is to use photo recovery software. One I used before is Asoftech Photo Recovery.