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Kibi

Kibi is a term with multiple meanings across different domains and languages.

In computing, kibibyte, abbreviated KiB, is a binary unit of data equal to 2^10 bytes, or 1024 bytes. It was introduced by the International Electrotechnical Commission as part of the IEC prefixes in 1998 to reduce confusion with the decimal kilobyte, which is defined as 1000 bytes. The term kibi sits alongside other binary prefixes such as mebibyte (MiB) and gibibyte (GiB). In practice, some contexts still use kilobyte to refer to both 1000 and 1024 bytes, but KiB provides a precise distinction for memory sizes and data transfer calculations.

In historical geography of Japan, Kibi refers to an ancient province, 吉備国 (Kibi no kuni), located in

There are other contemporary uses of the term in place names and personal names in different languages,

the
central
part
of
western
Honshu.
The
province
roughly
corresponds
to
parts
of
present-day
Okayama
Prefecture
and
surrounding
areas.
The
name
survives
in
regional
toponyms
and
archaeological
sites
associated
with
the
Kibi
region,
which
features
in
studies
of
early
Japanese
state
formation
and
culture.
The
region
is
also
linked
in
historical
and
literary
contexts
to
various
figures
and
religious
centers
connected
to
its
geography.
but
the
two
primary
senses
are
the
binary-data
prefix
used
in
computing
and
the
historic
Japanese
province.