Home

EiB

EiB stands for exbibyte, a unit of information used in computing to quantify very large data sizes. It represents 2^60 bytes, equal to 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes. The prefix exbi- and the symbol EiB are part of the binary prefix system designed to distinguish powers of two from the decimal prefixes used with bytes (for example, the exabyte, EB, denotes 10^18 bytes).

In the binary system, 1 EiB is also equal to 1,024 PiB, or 1,048,576 TiB, or 1,073,741,824

EiB is standardized within the IEC/ISO binary-prefix framework to provide unambiguous terminology for powers of two

GiB.
These
relationships
follow
the
progression
of
binary
prefixes:
KiB,
MiB,
GiB,
TiB,
PiB,
EiB,
and
so
on.
The
decimal
counterpart,
exabyte,
uses
the
prefix
exa-
and
is
10^18
bytes,
which
means
1
EiB
is
about
1.1529
EB.
in
computing.
It
is
most
commonly
encountered
in
discussions
of
very
large-scale
storage
capacities,
such
as
data
centers,
cloud
storage
infrastructure,
or
theoretical
memory
budgets.
In
everyday
consumer
contexts,
capacities
are
more
often
described
in
decimal
units
(GB,
TB),
leading
to
occasional
confusion
between
binary
and
decimal
measurements.
Nevertheless,
EiB
and
other
binary
prefixes
are
widely
used
in
technical
documentation
and
system
specifications
to
convey
precise
scales
of
data.