If you have Microsoft Office Picture Manager you can copy and paste the picture to that , click on picture then re size, then you can change it to your desired size.
If enf means enough, then it all depends on the size of each picture. 1 GB could contain 250 pictures if each picture was 4.096 MB in size each
This all depends on the size fo the picture and the resolution, inherantly there is no correlation between KB/MB and actual inches/size...the only way to determine size in this manner would be to check the resolution of the picture and compare it to the amount of pixels in the picture itself.
232 MB is 232x 1MB. 1MB is 1024 KB (Kilobytes) 1 Kilobyte is 1024 bytes. 1 byte is 8 bits, and a bit is the simplest form of memory. Just to put all of this in perspective for you I'll give you some average figures of what some things you may be familiar with average out in size. 1 picture is usually 1 MB in size. 1 song is usually about 4 MB in size. 1 MS Word document is usually 16KB - 1MB in size (depending on the length) Hope this helps.
it is a bit less than a normal sized picture
1 megabyte = 1 048 576 bytes
1 MB = 1x10^6 B
You can either load it into Microsoft Picture Manager and resize it so the smaller picture will be less MB in size. Or you can change the image format. JPEG images are usually quite high in MB size, so it's best to convert it to either BMP, PNG, TIFF or a Windows Metafile.
MB is better resolution ...if you mean size. If you mean quality that will depend on the way you took the picture. For example you can have a 10Mb picture that looks bad because of bad lighting and a 5MB picture that looks great because of good lighting. KB is 1,000 bytes and MB is 1,000,000 bytes the more bytes the more data that the picture has, the more data the bigger you can print and edit.
It all depends on the size of the picture files, for they are all different. Just make a folder with all your picture, then right click on it, and click on properties, and it will tell you how much you have.
It can be a single picture of reasonably high quality. However, you can fit several pictures in a megabyte, or a single picture, of very high quality, can use several megabytes. It all depends on the amount of detail, and the quality, of the picture.
It's a Tera Byte. 1024 GB = 1 TB. 1024 KB = 1 MB 1024 MB = 1 GB