If you mean like "bytes per second", just divide the file size by the number of seconds. The number of seconds will be shown in any audio player, such as Winamp.
You can determine the file size of an audiobook by checking the properties of the file on your computer or device. The file size will be displayed in bytes, kilobytes, megabytes, or gigabytes depending on the size of the file.
Basically 1 kilobyte
The answer is 246 sectors. 123 x 1024 bytes per KB = 125,952 total bytes in the file. 125,952 bytes / 512 sectors per cluster = 246 sectors
MIDI files only have the notes of the performance. It is up to the sound card or program to make the actual sound. For example, to play one note of a piano sound for one second in mono at CD quality, a WAV audio file needs 44100 bytes of information. A MIDI file can do it in 14 bytes.
1 mb= 1024 bytes 10 mb= 10240 bytes 100mb= 102400 bytes I hope you meant that, if you meant something other, just say it.
There are many free audio file converter you can download on line. Audacity is an audio file converter that can be use with most pc like mac and others. It works quite fine for a free install.
Seek to the end of the file (fseek) and check how many bytes are in the file If the byte count is zero the file is empty.
Right click on the file and select properties. The size is listed there.
1 byte 10 bytes 100 bytes 1000 bytes = 1 mb
.wav an extension file . mean ( waveform audio file )
Go onto your internet and type in 'Audio File Converter'