My nano has 347 songs, with 1 day and 6 hours of listening time. Depends on the quality/bitrate of your songs. The higher the bitrate the lower amount of songs.
You need to download a Bitrate converter.
It won't change the volume of the music majorly but it's the base and sound quality that makes a difference. if you have a low bit rate it might be scratchy or wont sound a s good on high quality speakers.
It shouldn't. However, it mainly depends on where you get your songs from. Songs at 128 bitrate could sound great (most likely when legally downloaded) in comparison to songs at 192 (most likely when illegally downloaded) possibly because they were converted from a lower bitrate.
You need to re-encode your video with the changed bitrate.
Bluetooth 2.0 Nominal bitrate is 3.0Mbps but the practical bitrate is 2.1Mbps
The mechanical advantage of a machine tells us how much it can multiply or change the input force. A higher mechanical advantage means the machine is more effective at reducing the force needed to perform a task. Machines with a higher mechanical advantage are generally considered more useful because they make work easier to accomplish.
It really depends on how many songs you want to have, and also the size of the file. If you are downloading higher bitrate songs, you will require more space for each song. Generally 1 gb of space can hold an average of 256 songs.
One main advantage is, generally speaking, the sounds on FM channels is generally clearer.
The length of a video in minutes cannot be determined solely from its file size (160 MB) without knowing the bitrate (data rate) of the video. For example, if the video has a bitrate of 1,000 kbps (kilobits per second), it would be approximately 21.3 minutes long. However, if the bitrate is higher or lower, the duration would vary accordingly. Thus, the exact length depends on the video's encoding and quality settings.
FASM "Quality Enhancer Bitrate Squeezer" is an application for compressing h264 video streams, optimised for low bitrate.
DVD outputs at a higher bitrate, which would equate to a better picture quality at the same spindle speed.