Important Note: Although data rates and data storage both use bits, bytes, kilobits, etc, there is an interesting difference. It is generally accepted that when discussing data rates, kilobytes are measured as 1000 bits (not 1024 bits as used in data storage). This FAQ is specifically for data rates only.
Bits and Bytes are binary data units.
Bits: Bits are the smallest binary data unit. A bit can only represent two binary values (1 or 0)
kilobit = 1000 bits Megabit = 1000 Kilobits
Bytes: A byte is a combination of 8 bits. One byte can represent 256 binary values (any number between 0-255).
Kilobyte = 1,00 bytes Megabyte = 1,000,000 bytes Gigabyte = 1,000,000,000 bytes
Important Note: BellSouth advertises their speeds in bits/second not bytes/second:
Lite is 768 kilobits/second (Kbps) or approximately 96 kilobytes/second
Ultra is 1472 kilobits/second (Kbps) or approximately 184 kilobytes/second
Extreme 3.0 is 3000 kilobits/second (Kbps) or approximately 375 kilobytes/second
Extreme 6.0 is 6000 kilobits/second (Kbps) or approximately 750 kilobytes/second
Bit to Byte Calculations: You can divide your speed (kilobits) by 8 to get your kilobytes or use this handy calculator tool for converting these measurements.
Andy Houtz DSL
feedback form
feedback form
by Andy Houtz edited by FAQFixer  last modified: 2007-08-20 09:18:54 |