if you have payed online yes but if you download a program like limewire you dont pay for either .
You can download this sound on the below linkhttp://rapidshare.com/files/305558900/Rugby_Trumpet.mp3 | 44 KB
1200 kb
Forbes KB is 5' 11".
25 KB (2,161 Words)
It depends on how long the song is and what quality and compression you have it in. An average 3 - 4 minute song in average quality will be around 3MB or 0.003GB
if you have payed online yes but if you download a program like limewire you dont pay for either .
I think you mean 1GB, anyway, It depends on the size of a song. Usually an MP3 song will be about a couple of thousand KB. I have a 2GB Ipod, I think, and I have about 200 songs. You will probable fit around 100.
This is not possible. MP3 files are already heavily compressed. There's no way to fit the enormous amount of data that a 3 MB MP3 file would have into just 3 KB.
Mb=Megabytes Kb=Kilobytes 1 Mb=1,024 Kb so if you are talking about storage on an mp3 player or such yes, mb is better
it can download a 10mb file in 1 minute and 20 seconds
The size of the download for Minecraft is 258 KB.
You can download it free on coolroms.com. You have to download no$gba 2.6a before downloading the rom. You have to change the settings of it to eeprom8 kb and 64 eeprom kb.
The average size of an mp3 is around 4,000 kb's, or close 4 mb's. It takes 8,000 mb's to make 8 gb's. Since we know this, we can do some math. How many times does 4 go into 8,000? Around 2,000 give or take a few hundred.
Is varies on the lenght of the song, and the compression used. ie 320kb/s, 128kb/s, 64 kb/s etc. The normally are between 3mb 7mb. If a somg is 32mb it is probably lossless, ie. no compression is used (.flac).
Songs come in many different shapes and sizes. It all depends on the file format and the bitrate. I'm going to make a lot of assumptions here. I'll assume you're asking about the MP3 file format at a constant (as opposed to variable, which is impossible to calculate for your question) bitrate of 128 kilobits/sec(kbps). Depending on who you ask, 1 kb=1024 b or 1 kb=1000 b. In this case, it's the latter. Also keep in mind, there is added overhead in almost any music format. This overhead contains information about the file, but the added amount of size is almost negligible, especially when you talk about longer songs or songs at a higher bitrate. With the above assumptions in mind, a 1 minute song would be about 940 kB. This remains pretty linear. A 2 minute song would be 1880 kB. A 3 minute song would be 2820. A song of x minutes in length would be x * 940 kB. To get it in MB, just divide by 1024. Keep in mind, this only holds true for songs encoded at 128 kbps. At a higher or lower bitrate, you'll need to tweak the formula included below. For any math geniuses out there, that's: [time in secs] * [bitrate in kbps] * [1000 b / 1 kb] * [1 B / 8 b] * [1 kB / 1024 B] * [1 MB / 1024 kB] = Size in MB Simplified: [bitrate in kbps] * 7500 / 1048576 [128] * 7500 / 1048576 = .92 MB + [overhead for the MP3 format]. That's about 940 kB / minute
1000 kb = 1 mb 1000 mb = 1 Gb An average song is about 4 - 5 mb (Per song). So, you do the calculations. Generally, the bigger the size of the songs that you have, the less amount of songs you can put in your 30 Gb.