GB? You mean gay boys? OVER 9000
35 manufacturer's GB is 35000 mb, but 35840mb really
The content of the picture and what "Quality" level you are using affects how many pictures a memory card will hold. A 2 GB card in a 7.2 MP camera will hold something like 800 pictures on medium quality and 400 pictures on high quality.
There is no 1 Gigabyte Itouch but the following sizes hold: * 8GB, 16GB, or 32GB flash drive1 * Holds up to 1,750, 3,500, or 7,000 songs in 128-Kbps AAC format
There isn't a specific answer, because it depends on the format, resolution, and compression algorithm used as well as the length of the individual movies. If it helps any, an HD movie using the H.264 video codec takes up around 12 GB an hour.
60
The number of movie minutes that can fit in one gigabyte depends on the quality of the video. For high-definition video, you may fit around 5-8 minutes per gigabyte, while for standard definition video, you may fit around 15-20 minutes per gigabyte.
Typically, it is estimate that the camera with 60 gb would hold about 15 hours of recording. But like the previous poster said it would depend on your frame rate, resolution, and encoding. It also would depend if it is shot in standard definition or high definition as well.
Storage limits do not translate into time limits. It depends on the quality of the video, and the quality of audio. I would say somewhere around 12 hours of video tape high quality + high quality audio.
30 hours or video...
It depends on the quality of the video and the file type. A small file quality in mp4 file format will probably be about 4 hrs. A high quality mp4 file will probably be about 2 hrs on a 1 gigabyte storage device
A good rule of thumb to apply is 10 GB can record about 45 minutes of video; therefore, 20 GB - 1.5 hours, 40 GB - 3 hours, 80 GB - 6 hours, 120 GB - 9 hours, etc. This, however, is just an estimate. You will definitely get more or less depending on the quality of video. Low or poor quality will give you more time, but high or excellent clarity will, of course, give you less time.
The concept of measuring time in gigabytes is not accurate. A gigabyte is a unit of digital storage capacity, not time. It represents 1 billion bytes of data. Time is measured in units such as seconds, minutes, and hours.
The simple answer is it will store about half of a full screen DVD movie (1.5 - 2 hours worth) However in reality it depends on several factors. High definition or Low definition? The size of the screen it will be shown on. Ipod or 42" Plasma TV? If you want to show the video on an IPod 3" screen then you will get about 4-6 hours worth once the video file has been reformatted for the small screen. There isn't a single answer for this question. It all depends on the video format, and the final screen size the video is optimized for.
That really depends on the quality of the video. A low-quality video may use 1 megabyte (not gigabyte) per minute, or a few megabytes per minute. A DVD, which is already high quality, has 4.7 gigabytes for a capacity of perhaps a little over 2 hours (120 minutes). A Blu-ray disc, which has a still higher quality, uses about 25 gigabytes for the same playing time.
That's less than a half of a GB.
it depends on what the project was captured on originally as well as how many effects and other assets you've added. Ten minutes of standard definition video will be much smaller than, say, prores444.