That will depend on the settings such as bit depth and file format.
about 1.2 to 1.6 million pixels
pixels do not go into megabytes. Kilabytes do. There are 1024 kilabytes in one megabyte. 1024 megabytes in one gigabyte and 1024 gigabytes in one tetrabyte.
Pixels and megabytes are two completely different things, thus a comparison cannot be drawn.
No, MEGA PIXELS is how how good a camera is or stuff like that, while MB is a size of a computic file, good luck!
20,971,520 bytes = 20,480 kb = 20 mb= 0.01953 gb = 0.00002 tb
That can vary a LOT, depending on the video's size (height and width, in pixels), as well as its quality.
Approx 64 pics
It depends on the resolution of the picture - the number of pixels. At fairly high resolution only about 10 pictures.
I am not quite sure what you mean by "20X60 KB". File sizes are usually specified with a single number of KB or MB. In any case, the file size depends not only on the pixels, but also on the color depth, and compression options.
The amount of memory required depends not only on the number of pixels but on the details in which colours are stored.The amount of memory required depends not only on the number of pixels but on the details in which colours are stored.The amount of memory required depends not only on the number of pixels but on the details in which colours are stored.The amount of memory required depends not only on the number of pixels but on the details in which colours are stored.
the 4 mega pixel 1gb camera would have more space but the 6 mega pixel camera takes a better picture
There are several different formats of HD. The one used most widely is 1080 x 1920. Multiply the number of lines by the number of pixels per line and you get 2073600 pixels per frame. Each pixel requires 3 bytes to display 24 bit colour so there are 6220800 bytes per frame. (broadcast equipment uses more bits per pixel). Note that the number of pixels is per frame, so a 1080i (interlaced) image will have the same number of pixels but will use two separate fields to display them. Finally, as there are 29.97 frames per second (US standard) a full HD image will need around 186 megabytes per second for full quality moving video.