How many minutes of music does an 8 GB iPod Touch hold?
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M$8 Answers
http://www.apple.com/ipodtouch/specs.html#compare
They say that the 8GB has capacity for 1750 songs as you wrote. This is further defined as "Music capacity is based on 4 minutes per song and 128-Kbps AAC encoding". So in this case, their estimate is 1750*4 minutes which equals 7000 minutes or 116.6 hours (4.86 days).
They are also assuming 128-Kbps AAC encoding so this depends on the quality of the encoding.
www.apple.com
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M$*Music capacity is based on 4 minutes per song and 128-Kbps AAC encoding, so 1,750 x 4 = 7,000 minutes.
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M$96kbs: The sound clearly lacks definition: as an example, hall's noises are perceived as some breath. The result is comparable to a good FM radio.
112kbs: The sound seems less present and less natural than the original. The definition is a bit less good, the voice is less clear. Attacks are less spontaneous. The spatialization is different from the original recording: the sound seems to be located more far and more lower. There is however a very noticeable improvement compared to 96kbs.
128kbs: Hall's noises are slightly less defined than the original. The violin is a bit less present and the piano attacks a bit less sharp. The voice is nearly identical to the original recording but sibilants are less pronounced. We can notice the same spatialization problem as with the 112kbs's one although there is again a good improvement compared to the 112kbs rate.
160kbs: The sound is more natural than 128kbs but the improvement is less spectacular than during the two preceding stages. The sound is different from the original, without however being possible to tell in what. I think that the difference resides more in what we feel rather than in what we hear.
192kbs: The sound is not felt as the original recording. It is however totally impossible to tell in what.
256kbs: The sound is indiscernible from the original. It is impossible to make the difference with the original recording.
320kbs: The sound is indiscernible from the original. It is impossible to make the difference with the original recording.
CD Audio : The sound of the burned CD is strictly identical the manufactured CD. This test, although it could appear useless, is however necessary so in order to insure that it is impossible that the burning step introduces differences, that would have falsified tests.
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M$You can leave an optional "tip" with Mahalo's virtual currency, Mahalo Dollars. If you are asking a difficult question that might require some research, or if you'd like a wide variety of feedback, a higher tip often leads to more answers to your question.
M$I heard somewhere the average now is around 160Kbps, so that gives you 48 seconds per MB. That ends up being about 100 hours.
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M$You are looking at about 234 hours (14,040 minutes) of music at 64 Kbps
117 hours (7,020 minutes) at 128 Kbps
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M$If you are ripping the music from a CD into iTunes you can go to your settings and see the bitrate and format (mp3 or aac) you are saving too.
You can also go to your music folder and right click on a music file... when you right click you will have a 'properties' option, this will give you the information as well.
I am not currently at a computer that has iTunes on it but if you need any more detail on this feel free to send me a private question and when I am near a computer with iTunes I can screenshot the spots that will let you change these options.
How do I know at which bit-rate I'm saving my music?
http://www.apple.com/ipodtouch/specs.html
If you want to know how to convert video and put DVD movie on iPod, I think this step by step guide would help you
http://www.reviewstown.com/how-to-convert-dvd-video-to-ipod.html
You can leave an optional "tip" with Mahalo's virtual currency, Mahalo Dollars. If you are asking a difficult question that might require some research, or if you'd like a wide variety of feedback, a higher tip often leads to more answers to your question.
M$You can leave an optional "tip" with Mahalo's virtual currency, Mahalo Dollars. If you are asking a difficult question that might require some research, or if you'd like a wide variety of feedback, a higher tip often leads to more answers to your question.
M$