An administrator can go to Special:ThemeDesigner and upload it under the Customize tab. Note that it must be a .JPG, .GIF, or .PNG, and has to be under 150Kb.
It depends on the quality of the pictures, but in short, yes it can - easily. A picture from an iphone will be about 150kb so it could hold about 55,000. A good quality picture will be about 1MB and even then, that will hold around 8,000. Hope this helps
1x speed is about 150Kb per second.
Yes ... "m" = million ... "k" = one thousand ... so ... 2,440,000 is larger than 150,000 ...
you keep your background image under 150kb (under 100 or 50kb is even better). Why? Because having a really large (in terms of file size) image will really slow down your blog's loading time for visitors.
Is this an image from a digital camera? If its a JPG, its probably larger than 2048x1536 isn't it. Any image larger than that will throw an "Unsupported Format Error". If its a BMP it has to be less than 150KB in size for the PSP, but based on your question I bet its a JPG.
52X has nothing to do with the rotational speed of the platter. The 52X speed rating indicates the refers to the fact that the drive can read data off of the disk at 52 times the speed of an original CD-ROM drive. Original CD-ROM drives read disk data at 150 kilobytes per second, so a 52X drive reads at 52 x 150KB/s.
computer hard disks are often with high capacity ranging from few HUNDRED GB to several TB, CDs are generally of low capacity general is 700 MB hard disks have to be protected from dust and dirt as a single scratch on it can crash your system that's y it is encased in a aluminium strong case, while cds are need not safe guard that much some scratches wont destroy your data. data transfer rate of recent hard disks have crossed even 6 GB per second while the cds have 52x speed highest 52X drive reads at 52 x 150KB/s
The number of photos that can fit on a 4.7 GB DVD depends on the size of each photo. If we assume an average photo size of 4 MB, then you could fit approximately 1175 photos on a 4.7 GB DVD. This calculation is based on the fact that 1 GB is equal to 1024 MB, so 4.7 GB is equal to 4812.8 MB. Dividing 4812.8 MB by 4 MB per photo gives us around 1175 photos.