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A bit (a contraction of binary digit) is a unit of data that consists of a binary value (0 or 1, also represented on/off and true/false). Groups of 8-bits of data are measured as bytes.

Because of the relationship of bits to bytes (8 bits = 1 byte), it is a significant difference in overall storage quantity should the two nomenclatures be confused. Typically, bytes are used for physical storage (eg. 20 GB capacity), while bits are used for throughput or bandwidth ratings (eg. 400 Mbps transfer rate, or bit rate).

Variations

Starting with iOS 11 and Mac OS X 10.6, Apple stopped using binary values and switched to decimals, causing a "megabyte" to report 1,000,000 bytes instead of 1,048,576 bytes, as had been done in the past. This created an illusion of a slight increase in data capacity (memory and storage).[1][2]

References

  1. Jason Snell. "Snow Leopard's new maths", Macworld, 2009-08-28. Retrieved on 2011-04-13. 
  2. How Mac OS X reports drive capacity. Apple Inc. (2009-08-27). Retrieved on 2009-10-16.

See also

External links

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