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Kilobits

Kilobit is a unit of information equal to 1000 bits, following the SI prefix kilo- (10^3). The term is most commonly encountered in data rate measurements, where speeds are expressed as kilobits per second (kbps) to describe network capacity or channel throughput.

In practice, kilobits are rarely used to quantify stored data. Data quantities are usually described in bytes,

Kilobits per second (kbps) are widely used to report connection speeds for telecommunications and networks. For

Ambiguity can arise because “kb” is sometimes used informally to denote either kilobits or kilobytes. To avoid

with
bits
converted
to
bytes
by
dividing
by
eight.
Consequently,
1
kilobit
equals
0.125
kilobyte
in
decimal
terms.
In
binary-oriented
contexts,
the
analogous
unit
is
the
kibibit
(1
kibibit
=
1024
bits),
though
the
latter
is
less
frequently
used
in
everyday
language.
example,
dial-up
modems
historically
achieved
around
56
kbps,
while
modern
broadband
is
measured
in
megabits
per
second.
As
data
rates
scale
upward,
the
use
of
kilobits
becomes
less
common
for
very
high
speeds,
with
megabits
per
second
(Mbps)
and
gigabits
per
second
(Gbps)
becoming
standard.
confusion,
the
expressions
kilobit
(kbit),
kilobits
per
second
(kbit/s
or
kbps),
or
clearly
stated
units
are
preferred.
Kilobits
remain
a
fundamental
concept
in
information
theory
and
telecommunications,
particularly
when
describing
transmission
speeds
at
the
bit
level.
See
also
kilobyte,
kibibit,
data
rate,
and
bits
per
second.