1tb how much video will it hold
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Two things. Yes, the Microsoft and other models do make components seem cheap or free because of bundling. If you try to fill it with documents and photos and music and videos just because it is available then it will most likely be of less value to you your second point.
When you have one of something then it is valuable but when you have 20,, of something then it loses its luster. Good question! The simple but frustrating answer is: it depends. In my blog example, approximately 86 pages of Word document constitutes one megabyte. That would be a short book but there is extra formatting in Word that takes up even more bytes beyond just the plain characters.
If you have 50 lines of 50 characters each per page then each page would represent bytes which means that a page novel would equal 1 megabyte. In a published book there will be some formatting involved because of fonts and other characters so you would be lucky to get a to page book in a megabyte. So, the answer to your question is one.
Unless you watch p, p and the upcoming 4k videos will eat a TB away. Okay, no human can read that much, but what if you were responsible for reviewing and determining what is important in 1 terabyte of data storage, where some is video, some is documents, some is audio recordings? Such is the dilemma facing criminal defense attorneys these days in some federal cases. The government dumps that much discovery, and more, on the defendant and his counsel.
Then the prosecutors produce at trial just that carefully selected evidence which they think will help them convince a jury to convict the defendant.
So, the defendant and defense counsel cannot anticipate and prepare for what is actually produced. Data overload is just one of the prosecution techniques deliberately used by prosecutors to destroy any chance of a fair trial.
There oughta be a law — for example: cases where the prosecutor produces more than the equivalent of , pages of discovery materials, should be dismissed for violating the due process right of the defendant to get a fair trial.
Paul: Wow, I never knew about that. Thanks for sharing. Paul: after reflecting on your post again, I just realized that once computers become intelligent enough, they could sift through those mountains of data quickly and extract the needed pertinent information. So perhaps soon, humans will be much more dependent on computers than we already are—or at least, those humans in trouble with the law! Interesting take on the volumes of data that the attorneys and prosecutors not to mention defendants.
The more serious the crime, the more volumes of data including references and copies of other cases! I have witnessed something very interesting prior to computers being involved and that is watching one person sue another claiming they should receive more money for child support. The step-mother had convinced the father from the very beginning of the the divorce to keep a physical calendar and mark the days the boys were in his care.
Each year, the calendar gets taken down from the wall and placed in a safe place. Sure enough, the mother sues the father and the step-mom reminds father of the calendars. Father takes calendars to court. There are some judges that believes no one produces reams of data that is junk which is why many of the world corporations get away with polluting or commandeering natural resources away from the public trust.
The consumer or victim oftentimes do not have the resources or the ability to provide , pages of research study where , pages are filled with fluff. You are so right of the prosecutors tactics. What size flash drive I might to need to store perhaps , songs only? Thanks IH. In either calculation, you would need storage equaling about gigabytes.
I just did it quickly in my head, but I think the OP was off by nearly an order of magnitude. I just was doing this out of curiosity and for possible future reference. Or did I miss something? OK I did miss something. But according to your assumptions a CD holds songs or about 10 record albums!
So, do I have it correct? And if so, when does anyone ever find the time to listen to , songs? Even if they were 3 minute pop songs that would take almost a year listening 24 hours a day, just to listen to all of them once. When would someone find time to eat, much less time to make silly responses to IT blogs?
Just read your blog and the ensuing comments and thoughts. Loved the piece. Google Apps for work is offering up to 16TB. This is a lot of boxes. I am researching the possibility of transferring them all to flash drives, or some other kind of memory device. So clearly I have more research to do! Thanks for your info. Dave, thanks for your comments. I have been in the business long enough that I remember working with bytes and kilobytes so my perspective has partly to do with my history.
It could be that the terabyte is the new megabyte and I just need to catch up Good luck getting everything moved over to storage. I am sure they come in 4TB, but maybe even 5 or 6 or wait a week! That seems all the OP needs. Some day I may want to, just as a backup. David, thanks for the follow-up. I think you are right about the future of movies. They could even be removable so you keep a small collection of drives on your shelf. The other option is cloud storage but you need to have access to the cloud in order to utilize it.
If I am backpacking in the wilderness area, I most likely will not have a signal to be able to access my movies. If I get lost however, accessing my cloud storage to watch movies will be the least of my worries For the most part, how much media does one really need immediate access, everywhere they are? Going camping and want a couple movies for the trip, just plan ahead, have them download the day before and watch them when you get there, or passengers watch them on the way.
Even small removable drives 1TB compact flash cards — not too small physical size, quite durable with a good cataloging system. Or maybe even a library system on your home network, where you buy a toaster size device, where it would have slots for maybe SD cards in it.
When you run out of space, just drop a few more cards into it. Heck, I remember my first computer class in high school, we saved programs on a paper punch-tape!
Memory was at a premium. A terabyte in a flash drive is like something out of Star Trek! And my iPhone probably has more power than the entire Houston control room for the Apollo moon missions. Cool times, huh? Dave, At the risk of revealing my age, all I can say is, you must have sat next to me in high school You described my experience to a tee.
Cool times indeed. I think this is an interesting article. It looks like I may be among the youngest on this thread. You are thinking of data storage in an antiquated way. Someone else mentioned 4K video, well with advances like blue ray, 4K, mp4, upcoming wearable technology, etc we will need more data storage for the same amount of content. Example: songs in mp3 format will be different then the amount of storage for songs in mp4 format. Thanks for your thoughts.
You are correct and I probably need to update this blog post. I was talking with someone the other day about Blu-ray, 4K and mp4. They all require a lot more storage space.
I see 1 Tb flash thumb drives now as well as 2, 3, and 4 Tb backup drives from reliable suppliers such as Seagate. Most non-professional users will be fine with toGBs of storage.
For example, GB can hold more than30, average size photos or songs. Granted, this is all for conventional harddrives. Laptops that come with SSD usually have just GB or GB of storage , which is enough for all your programs and a decent amount of data.
However, users who have lots of demanding games or huge media collections will want to store some files in the cloud or add an external hard drive. You could fit approximately hours worth of movies onone terabyte. Assuming each movie is roughly minutes long, thatwould be about movies. I do know people who have thatmany movies in their library, so it is possible that they couldbuild a database of movies to fill that space.
That depends on how long the films are and what type of video encoding system you are using. If a film is encoded into standard DVD format 4. If a laptop has a 1TB hard disk, mostlikely it is using some old, slow, and unreliable old hard drivetechnology to save money.
You should rather look for one that usesflash storage called an SSD. According toRayburn, the average Netflix video is 90 minutes long and eats up1.
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