If you mean in a music file, or other sound file, it varies widely, depending on the quality of the music. A good quality MP3 uses about 1 MB for every minute of sound, but you can still get an acceptable quality for a fraction of a MB/minute. Anyway, 1 MB/minute seems to be typical.
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Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, like, the number of minutes in a 25 MB file totally depends on the file type and quality. But on average, a 25 MB file could be like a 5-minute song or a 1-minute video, give or take. So, like, there's no one-size-fits-all answer here, you know?
ITS NOT 2 IM DOING A MUSIC THING AND I DID 17mb AND ITS STILL NOT WORKING
There is no standard conversion between minutes and megabytes. For a fairly high-quality MP3 file, you can estimate about one minute per megabyte. For low, but still acceptable, quality, you can get more. For instance, the German courses from Deutsche Welle have about 4-5 minutes for each megabyte. For even a low-quality movie you can expect several megabytes for every minute.
It depends on the quality.
None. The units are incompatible.
How many minutes of WHAT, exactly? A minute of sound, stored as MP3, uses up about 1 MB - but the amount of space per minute can vary widely, depending on the quality of the recording. A single minute of video, in high quality, will take up several MB - but once again, exactly how much will depend on the quality of the recording.
Movies come in different qualities; the amount of kilobytes or megabytes per minute can vary widely. I suggest you get a sample of a movie in the desired quality, and divide the file size by the number of minutes, to get an idea. For your calculations, note that 1 Gigabyte = 1024 Megabytes - which you can round to 1000 for most practical purposes.