If you have an iPod nano that can hold 1,000 four minute songs, and you have 1,000 two minute songs, will your iPod let you continue adding more songs or will it stop at the 1,000th song?
you ipod will let you add songs till its full. now 1,000 four min songs is aprox. the max.. but not always the case. if you have enough space it will let you go over 1,000 songs but it may stop you before that if you go over its space limit (there are extra files in songs that wil take up more room for example songs downloaded from cds take up more room than songs from itunes or like limewire) [ DancinCutie08's advice column | Ask DancinCutie08 A Question ]
Igotamonopoly answered Tuesday April 25 2006, 12:17 am: It's measured in bytes, which is like storage. (This is from my extrememly limited computer history.)
If you have 2 songs that take up the allotted byte amount, then your iPod is "full", and you can't add any more songs.
If you have 2,000 songs that take up the byte amount, then that's okay too.
Sherry answered Tuesday April 25 2006, 12:01 am: It doesnt matter how long your songs are, it stops at 1000 songs. But then you could always delete the songs you barley listen to, to make room for more songs! [ Sherry's advice column | Ask Sherry A Question ]
haloguy answered Monday April 24 2006, 11:43 pm: The iPod will continue to let you add songs until the memory is filled. The "1000 song" thing just means around that many songs worth of memory. If the songs are small files, the iPod can hold a lot more.
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