'Kbps' stands for Kilo Bits Per Second.
For more detail you can check on MP3 file structure and bit rates, like 128Kbps or 320Kbps.
all you have is just for the first step create a file for all of the musics files have and name it that you know what is in it like for exemple 'music files' then in that file that just created make files for each type of music files you have and once again name it that you know what you have in it and put the music files eac exact type of i and you ready, if you listen to music ou just go there and choose which one.
Because thats how artists make their money.... :)
Broadcast Music, Inc.
Electro dance music
According to the official song storage capacity on Apple.com, an 8 gb iPod Touch can hold 1,750 songs. However, it really depends on the length of your songs, and the kbps your music is set at. If your songs are mostly about 3 minutes, and your songs are at 128kbps, then you should be able to hold about 2700 songs. If your songs are 4 minutes long then you can hold about 2030 songs. 96 kbps, at 3 mins: 3610 songs 128 kbps, at 3 mins: 2700 songs 160 kbps, at 3 mins: 2170 songs 192 kbps, at 3 mins:1810 songs 224 kbps, at 3 mins:1550 songs 256 kbps, at 3 mins:1350 songs 320 kbps, at 3 mins: 1080 songs The higher the kbps, the better the sound quality, but 128 kbps sounds perfect on Ipods.
KBps stands for kilobytes per second while kbps stands for kilobits per second. 56 KBps = 448 kbps 56 kbps = 7 KBps
It depends. Even though the 320 kbps is higher quality you might not be able to hear any difference between 320 and 192 kbps if your speaker or headphones aren't good enough. You could try www.mp3ornot.com, where you can try hearing the difference between 128 and 320 kbps-files. If you can't hear any notable difference there, you won't a notable difference between 192 and 320.
Both Amazon and iTunes supply music at 256 kbps but Amazon supplies MP3 files whereas iTunes supplies AAC (the audio part of MP4) files which are usually slightly smaller file sizes.
1,000,000/1,000 = 10001 kbps = one thousand bits per second1 mbps = one million bits per second
The iPod Touch supports many popular audio formats including: AAC (8 to 320 Kbps), Protected AAC (from iTunes Store), HE-AAC, MP3 (8 to 320 Kbps), MP3 VBR, Audible (formats 2, 3, 4, Audible Enhanced Audio, AAX, and AAX+), Apple Lossless, AIFF, WAV
54Mbps =54*1000 kbps (In actual 1KB=1024bytes) =54000 kbps =54000/8 KBps =6750 KBps (1Byte=8bits or 1B=8b) 54Mbps =54*1000 kbps (In actual 1KB=1024bytes) =54000 kbps =54000/8 KBps =6750 KBps (1Byte=8bits or 1B=8b)
Yes, PDA's will play music files.
38 kbps= 384/8 KBps ie 52 Kbps. Its the download speed. I bought this phone thinking speed is 384 KBPS but it was 384 kbps. Its a low modem speed but nice if you get full speed. I am a docomo user but getting only 15 KBps now. Was getting between 55-85 KBPs speed.
256
exe stands for Executable. FYI... com stands for command bat stands for batch
The abbreviation "kbps" stands for KiloBytes Per Second. This abbreviation is often used to measure how fast an internet connection is in terms of data download and upload speeds.
Make sure all music files are .mp3 files.