about 29 MB
yes .flac plays off cds like an mp3 and quality is stellar dudes..
you can Try VLC http://www.videolan.org/vlc/
The average image file size for websites in 2021 is around 1.9 MB.
The average song size on an mp3 file is 3 - 7mb.
The average size of a JPEG file is typically around 1-5 megabytes, depending on the resolution and quality of the image.
The average file size of a 1080p video per minute is around 150-200 megabytes.
No. Because Flac and DTS are different file formats. Probably what you have is a DTS files converted to Flac. Flac will play on some audio equipment, but support for flac is still rare. DTS will play on more audio hardware, and tends to be in most of the multichannel DVD amps.
Yes, it can hold the same type of metadata as an MP3 file.
If you download the file onto your computer as a music file (.flac file) and then put it in your music library, you can then put download it onto your phone.
The average font size of a heading is 44. It is set as default in the PowerPoint presentation.
Yes, but its very very limited. You need the "Xiph components for QuickTime", but its not really worth doing. Because that will only let you play flac files that are in an 'ogg container' rather than in a 'native flac'. What does that mean in English? Ogg, like some other file formats (mp4 in particular) is a 'container'. You can put other file types into this container (vorbis is easily the most common, to the point where when most people say 'ogg files' they really mean 'vorbis files in an ogg container'). So, if you want flac files to work with iTunes, the file must be 'blah blah.ogg' and not 'blah blah.flac'. You cant just change the filename to get it to work either, and as 99.9% of the flac's I've ever seen are 'native flac' its kind of pointless to even bother.
FLAC was created on 2001-07-20.