sure but only if you play online obviously, if you do, and you have many pcs at home then you need alot of band width
Well it depends on what kind of video games are the kids playing with and how long you use the video games. Some types of video games are for kids not all.
Stereo or mono depending on what your tv is set for
'''You can use this...''' '''"I enjoy videos and games of all genres, working for Family Video would utilize my love and knowledge of videos and games"''' '''Good luck! :)'''
Wrist/finger flexors and extensors and the muscles in the thumb. Not allot.
Video Game making does not use software and instead you program it by hand, unless you use an engine like Unreal or Unity, but you still have to program and make your own art. If you are looking for a software with a drag and drop interface to make simple games that you can publish to Kongregate, try Stencyl.
That depends on how much bandwidth the site uses, and your web host's pricing for bandwidth. If the site is mainly text, you can expect to use less bandwidth than if the site were hosting video or other rich media.
yes
1400 gb
Yes. Any transfer of information over a network, in this case the internet, will use bandwidth. How much bandwidth it will use is dependent on the technology behind the streaming and how large the source file is.
There is no information available as to how much bandwidth Essex FM online radio takes. It is not as much as required, but how much it takes up is what the worry is for. Most internet providers have a limit as to how much bandwidth you are allowed to use in a month.
If I understand your question correctly, you are asking if playing games (such as flash games) use a high amount of bandwidth. This depends on what kind of games you are playing. A flash game, Bloons for example, would use considerably less bandwidth than a game like Oblivion.
An endless amount of bandwidth, when you think about it.
DS games are anything up to 256MB, but there aren't many that are over 100MB.
dont know exact but i use about £50 a month
A simple search of the net will find there are many bandwidth monitoring sites that are available for free. A popular one is callled Free Meter Bandwidth Meter. You also can use WFilter freeware for network bandwidth monitoring.
One would use a bandwidth calculator to see how much data that they are using. Normally it goes by month long periods and you could measure it by that standard.
When a website "Embeds" a flash player, or a video, from youtube, a thing called "Bandwidth" is taken up. Youtube's server(s) can track where the bandwidth is being eaten - Externally or not. There are different ways to do this. An easy route is to use software that will track where the bandwidth is being requested. But it's very possible to create your own web software to do this.