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How Computer Bits and Bytes Abbreviations Work

By Kantus, published Jan 18, 2007
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Often, to make it easier to write large numbers, it is convenient to use abbreviations. Some of the most common abbreviations for large numbers include:

K = Kilo (1,000)
M = Mega (1,000,000)
G = Giga (1,000,000,000)
T = Tera (1,000,000,000,000).

In the future, it will become more common to use even larger numbers, so you can likely expect to see the following abbreviations in the future:

P = Peta (1,000,000,000,000,000)
E = Exa (1,000,000,000,000,000,000)
Z = Zetta (1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000)
Y = Yotta (1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000)

However, trying to use these abbreviations when dealing with computers, referring to bytes, is a little different.

The most common abbreviations used for bytes include:

8 bits = 1 byte
1,024 bytes = 1 KB
1,024 KB = 1 MB
1,024 MB = 1 GB
1,024 GB = 1 TB

In the future, as numbers grow larger and larger, we can expect to see the following abbreviations:

1,024 TB = 1 PT
1,024 PT = 1 ET
1,024 ET = 1 ZT
1,024 ZT = 1 YT

Usually the abbreviation name changes when the 1,000 limit is reached. For example 1,000 meters becomes 1 Kilometer, and 1,000 Kilometers will become 1 Megameter, and so on. For bytes, however, the abbreviation name changes when the 1,024 limit is reached. This is because of the numbering system that computers run on.

Normally, in any given NUMBER, each DIGIT has 10 possibilities (0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9), which can be called base 10. Computers, on the other hand, see each BIT (digit) of each BYTE (number) as either a 0 or a 1. So each bit has 2 possibilities (0,1), which can be called base 2. This is the main reason behind the 1,024 (rather than 1,000) milestone for each abbreviation.

The number 1 with a 0 added to the end becomes 10, and 10 with a 0 added to the end becomes 100, and so on. Each time a zero is added to the end, the number is multiplied by 10 (base 10). Similar to this, in base 2, a 1 with a 0 added to the end of it becomes 10 (which in base 10 is 2), and a 10 with a 0 added to the end becomes 100 (which in base 2 is 4), and so on.

How Computer Bits and Bytes Abbreviations Work

Bits & Bytes & Abbreviations

Credit: http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/bytes-ch.jpg

Copyright: http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/bytes-ch.jpg

Takeaways
  • 1 KB = 1,024 bytes
Did You Know?
The value "1000" in our numbering system (base 10) is one thousand, but in the computer's numbering system (base 2) is only eight.
Comments
Comments 1 - 2 of 2
 
 
Blessed one, the explination is almost perfect but 10 to the 3 power is 1000 not a 100, and 10 to the 4 power is 10000 no one thousand. thank you for the information .

Posted on 06/19/2007 at 11:06:00 AM

 
I am going to have to print this one out, I never can remember what is what and get very confused. ( which these days doesn't take much ) Thanks

Posted on 01/25/2007 at 9:01:00 AM

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