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It would vary as its 4gb but depending the size of your mp3 or since your ripping from CD it'd probably be a high bit rate so more space could you not clear out some space? 4gb usually holds 1,000 songs based off a 4 minute interval
When it says 2000 it means that it can hold 2000 songs, considering that each song is 2 MB. So, 2MB * 2000=4000MB=4GB. So your songs were much larger than that.
When you say having difficulty in adding the songs in CLIP, though you have enough space. I'd kindly request you to check for the number of songs that you have added.
Because when you add as MP3 player by default its bit rate is 128kbps so you can add up to 500 songs only. Kindly have a check on it.
I have given the number of songs that can be added with related to size of MP3 player..
Size of the player :512MB
1GB
2GB
4GB
8GB
16GB
32GB
Number of songs
: 125
250
500
1000
2000
4000
8000
The ipod nanos the smallest product in the Apple iPod line. The fourth generation
Nano comes in two different capacities, each capable of holding
thousands of songs.
Capacities
The fourth generation iPod Nano comes in 8 GB and 16 GB models. The 8
GB version can hold 2,000 songs, and the 16 GB version can hold 4,000
songs.
Tips
Song capacity estimates are based on music encoded in Apple's
proprietary format at a standard, average bitrate. The higher the
bitrate, the better the quality. Songs deviating from Apple's standard
(for example, CD-quality music or high bitrate MP3s) will use more disk
space.
History
Nano's predecessor, the iPod Mini, was released on January 6, 2004, and
was available with a 4 GB hard drive. The Nano was first released on
September 7, 2005, and was the first iPod to use flash memory. It was
first available in 2 GB and 4 GB versions. The fourth generation Nano
was released on September 9, 2008.
Size
The fourth generation iPod Nano is 3.6" tall and 1.5" wide.
Video
The third generation Nano, released on September 5, 2007, was the first
Nano to feature video playback. Storing videos on Nano can dramatically
reduce the amount of songs it can hold.
I haven't tried this, but I see no reason it why it shouldn't work. I have used an 2gb expansion card in my Sansa and it works just fine. The only problem is it will only play music off of an SD card, no video. I guess this is only to much memory if you don't need it. Rough guess is that a 4gb will hold roughly 1000 songs. I would only go for the smaller sd card if there was a substantial price difference and you won't be needing the extra space.
The problem is the files. What I'm doing right now is going through the files, cutting and pasting the individual mp3 files (Not the folders) to a temp file, deleting the artist and album folders from the player, and cutting and pasting them back into the player. This is very labour intensive. The player will look at how many folders (artist) sub-folders (album) then songs. When it hits 500 it stops looking. I had about 100 artists with several albums for most. It would only list 2 songs. I've deleted several artists (and sub-directories) and copied the songs onto the player (no folders) now I'm up to about 20 songs. The "easiest" way to load the player is to copy/paste individual mp3's onto the player. I'm looking for a firmware upgrade but I don't think I'll find one. The players seem to be made by Curtis International ( www.curtisinst.com ) link to manuals page for sylvania players: http://www.curtisint.com/web/category-Sub.asp?category=MP3s&subCat=MP3&catName=MP3%20PLAYERS&p=2
About 100 to 250 picture according on the resolution of the photos being taken. A 2 GB will hold 500 to 1000, according to the resolution.
So if your going on a trip or something important you may want to buy another 250 GM or upgrade tp a 2 GB card.
Hope this helps
Hi moogle.
Normally a 4GB player should hold about 1000 songs, but then again there are disclaimers from companies that it depends on the file format and the length of the songs that you download to the player. For example, an MP3 file is twice as large as a WMA file, etc.
Well, granted you're downloading songs of about 3-4 minutes average length, then there may be a possibility that some corruption has taken place in the memory of the player. You may need to format the player to completely remove these corruptions.
Here's how to format your E260:
(1) Set your player to MSC mode by navigating its Menu as follows:
Menu > Settings > USB Mode > ..select "MSC"
(2) Plug your E260 to your computer (are you using Windows XP or ME?). Your Operating System should recognize the player as a "Removable Disk" and will be assigned a drive letter.
(3) Right-click on the drive letter corresponding to your Sansa E260, then select "Format"
(4) When the Format window appears, make sure that the file system type is set to "FAT32", and that the "Quick Format" checkbox at the bottom of the window remains un-checked. Click "Start " to begin the process and follow the on-screen prompts. Formatting the player, though, will erase all your files but will clear the player of any corruption. Make a back up if you wish before formatting.
(5) Unplug your player and switch the mode back to MTP if you like. MTP is used for subscription songs while MSC is generally used for non-licensed songs (like songs from Limewire, songs ripped from CD's, etc.).
(6) Transfer your songs again to the player
I hope this helps. Normally this would solve the little glitches in your player. If it doesn't, leet me know... there may be another solution I could offer.
Syd :)
The iPod nano, introduced September 7, 2005, can hold approximately 500 or 1000 songs (on the 2.0 GB and 4.0 GB versions respectively in 128-Kbps AAC format) and as many as 25,000 "iPod nano-viewable" photographs.
The iPod nano, introduced September 7, 2005, can hold approximately 500 or 1000 songs (on the 2.0 GB and 4.0 GB versions respectively in 128-Kbps AAC format) and as many as 25,000 "iPod nano-viewable" photographs.
i have the same problem
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