the number of cycles per meter is the wavenumber divided by 2*pi.
:shy:
the reciprocal of frequency is period, which I'm sure you knew. and it should be clear that that period is not the same thing as wavelength.
also note that what's causing the standing wave is that there is something causing one end to vibrate, which sends a pulse through the medium (string) to the wall, the pulse reflects at this boundary with a 180-degree phase-shift, and this travels back to the original end. now, the wave is a standing wave because the frequency at which the free end is vibrating is such that it's sending out a pulse that happens to meet up with a reflected pulse at a certain point on the string.
(the easiest example is if they meet at the middle. then it's the entire length of the string that becomes a single wavelength of the standing wave.)
anyway, if you remove the source of vibration from the free end, you'd lose your standing wave!
despite the appearance of no motion, there actually is motion going on--you're just seeing the superposition (sum) of all the waves that are going back and forth along the string!
and you can find the speed of a single pulse traveling on that string that is creating that standing wave:
it's the frequency that the free end is vibrating with multiplied by the wavelength.
...i hope this helps you!
and now for a completely random smilie: :!)