A factory made audio CD, like any other CD will hold 700 MB of data. However, for the purpose of minimizing errors in large scale production, they are not usually filled to their maximum capacity.
An audio CD typically can hold up to 700 MB.
An audio CD typically can hold up to 700 MB.
Normal audio CDs hold 700 megabytes of data.
A megabyte can hold approximately 1 million bytes of data, which is equivalent to roughly 500 pages of plain text or a few minutes of audio or video.
An average CD can hold 700 MB of data.
The primary measurement of memory on a CD (Compact Disc) is in megabytes (MB). A standard CD can typically hold about 650 to 700 MB of data. This capacity allows for approximately 74 to 80 minutes of audio or equivalent data storage, depending on the format used.
One megabyte (MB) holds approximately 1 million bytes of data. More specifically, it is often defined as 1,024 kilobytes (KB), with each kilobyte consisting of 1,024 bytes. This means that a single MB can store various types of data, such as a few high-quality images, several minutes of audio, or a small text document.
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.
Certainly. CDs and CD-RWs usually hold between 650 and 700 Mb of data.
1024 MB = 1GB. Shaun
Ativa CD-r's hold 700 megabytes or 80 minutes of uncompressed Audio.
A CD-RM used to be able to store up to 650MB of information. CD-ROMs are now able to store up to 700 MB of data or 80mins. of Audio. and hold music like mac lethal and AC/DC