kilobytes

 

 The Journalist’s Guide to Gigs and Bytes

November 19, 2006

It seems like journalists in general are having a hard time to distinguish their gigsfrom their bytes, and their kilobits from their kilobytes. When reporting on internet connectivity in this country, it seems many journalists are incapable of distinguishing one from the other.

Now, I could create this guide by starting WAY from the back, and explain to you whata byte is, and how it differs from a bit, and so forth, but it would probably fail to get the message across. So let’s just start by saying that internet “stuff” and capacity is typically measured along two factors:

  1.  Speed – how fast data can be transferred from A to B, for example how long it takes to download a large file.
  2.  Size – how much you are allowed to, or have transferred from A to B, within a set period of time, or money.

Speed

Speed is normally measured in BITS per SECOND. This is called the bit rate. Don’t ask why, it’ll just get confusing. Just like wordly things are weighed in grams, and kilograms, so speed gets measured in *bits*, and *kilobits*. Instead of tons we have megabits. More or less a thousand bits make up the next unit, i.e. kilobits. Another thousand kilobits make a megabit. Exactly like kilograms, and grams, and tons. Except, a ton in bits is a *gigabit*. Bits, kilobits, megabits, gigabits. Each indicating the next 1000th unit.

The bit rate indicates how FAST one can get data from A to B. When someone says he has a one megabit line. It means that his line can transfer roughly 1000 * 1000  bits per second. See how we got to that?

Each megabit is made up out of 1000 kilobits and each kilobit is made up out of another 1000 bits.

Simple, isn’t it? Just like grams, and kilograms.

“Speed” in internet terms is exactly the same as “how fast does your car go?”

Speed is normally measured in kilobits, megabits, or gigabits per second – the bit rate

Technically when someone talks a bout a “one megabit” connection, he should be saying “one megabit per second” connection, but because speed is normally expressed in bits per second, everyone knows that he means 1 megabit per second, because he used the word *bit*. This is part of slang. “I have a one gigabit connection” will make most nerds want to hump your leg. This is a useful phrase to throw around at a geeky convention where you’d like to elicit some response from otherwise clamped up nerds.

Size

Size is used to measure data transferred from A to B. A transfer allowance is something contrived by ISP’s so that they don’t have to think about ContentionRatio, but that’s another topic altogether. The measurement of “amount of data transferred” is typically bytes, but bytes can be used to measure other things too, including speed (confusing eh, see the Caveats section further down).
Don’t worry. For all intents and purposes bytes are normally used to measure transferred data. A byte is normally the lowest denominator in computers of “how large” something is. Now, the same as with grams, we have bytes and kilobytes. A 1000 kilobytes makes up a *megabyte* (see the pattern here?). 1000 bytes becomes 1 kilobyte. 1000 kilobytes becomes a megabyte. 1000 megabytes make up a *gigabyte*.
Unlike Speed, Size isn’t measured per second or anything. That would be stupid. Size is just that. Size. Data transferred.
It’s akin to saying my car has driven 10 kilometres, or it has 123 000km’s on the odometer. It’s a measurement of size, or distance thus it makes no sense to express it as some size covered over time.
Another good indication of size, is when someone doesn’t mention bits in the sentence. “I have a 10 meg harddrive” means that the poor sap is from the stone ages, and that his disk can store 10 * 1000 * 1000 bytes. One megabyte is roughly equivalent to a single high resolution digital camera picture.
Ever since ISP’s caught on to the “pay per byte” model such as the one thrust upon the general ADSL populous by Telkom, ISP’s have been selling data in Gigabytes.
A gigabyte is by today’s broadband standards a relatively small amount of data. It equates to 1000 highres digital camera pictures, for reference. Some ISP’s notably Sentech, Vodacom, and MTN have also decided to sell data by the megabyte.
Paying for gigabytes and megabytes is like paying per kilometer for a rental car. Except not. Some ISP’s like SAIX have taken this to extreme. You buy three gigs, but if you don’t use them in the month, *they vanish into thin air*. It’s like getting a rental car with the first 300 kilometers free, but they’re only valid for a week.
You pay for something, and then someone else decides for how long you’re allowed to own it! Crazy stuff, and by now all the other ISP’s are emulating Telkom in the same insane scheme. It’s the same principle as cellphone “lost minutes” which is a big money spinner, but I digress…
Slang: “I’ve done forty gigs this month!” indicates that someone has transferred 40 gigabytes of data during the month. This is quite a good bunch of bytes transferred. Around 40 megabytes per month is the international standard for broadband transfer, allowed per month. “I got capped” typically refers to someone who’s finished his 3 gigabyte transfer allowance on the Telkom ADSL network. The “cap” refers to the “transfer allowance” and being “capped” means that your transfer allowance is utterly depleted.

How to write:

Advice to you – the journalist:  keep away from the abbreviations in articles. They confuse your readers and yourselves. Use the WORD terms such as megabits per second, or gigabytes, just like that, in the text of your article. Just as your editor doesn’t like to see “i have 5 apples” in an article, so readers don’t like to see ” 5kbps” in an article. You’re probably using the abbreviation incorrectly in any case and creating confusion. Rather write ” 5 megabit per second” or “five megabits per second” if you prefer. The phrase ” five megabits ” can also be used if the sentence you’re constructing already infers *speed*, such as “the modem speed is five megabit”.
This is the simplest way to avoid confusion, and make your article readable.

Here be dragons

During the expression of speed, abbreviations are used for the words kilobits, megabits, and gigabits per second. For expressing size, or speed there are several strains of abbreviations for kilobytes, kilobits and all the others we’ve covered so far.
I’d recommend any journalist to steer clear of these, but if you’re really brave feel free to use them, as long as you’re capable of using them correctly. I’ve been in IT for 16 years and I still write it down *wrongly* sometimes. The abbreviations suck. People twist them. Even the capitalisation of the letters sometimes makes a difference. *Don’t use them*.
Ok, you’re still here, so here’s the nitty:

Speed abbreviations

Measure in BITS per SECOND. “b” used an abbreviation indicates BITS.
*The B has to be in lower case to mean bits. In upper case it means bytes*
The above is important. Do not forget it.
*kbps = kilobits per second
*mbps = megabits per second
*gbps = gigabits per second
You can also capitalize the first letter like so:
*Kbps = kilobits per second
*Mbps = megabits per second
*Gbps = gigabits per second
The “p” can also be replaced with a slash like so:
*Kb/s = kilobits per second
*Mb/s = megabits per second
*Gb/s = gigabits per second
Americans tend to like the following ones, and it’s easy to see why:
* They avoid ambiguity…
*Kbit/s = kilobits per second
*Mbit/s = megabits per second
*Gbit/s = gigabits per second
If you must use an abbreviation, these last ones are probably the clearest
of the lot. kilobits also seems to be a special case. People argue that it should
always be written with a lower case letter in an abbreviation, such as kb/s rather than Kb/s.
Mb/s and Gb/s however always has to be capitalized. Or so they say. See why abbreviations suck?

Size abbreviations

Simply measured in BYTES. “B” used an abbreviation indicates BITS.
*The B has to be in UPPER case to mean bytes. In lower case it means bits*
The above is important. Do not forget it. This is why things get confused.
Remember SPEED = BITS, and SIZE = BYTES. There’s a vast difference.
* kB=kilobyte
* MB=megabyte
* GB=gigabyte
* TB=terabyte
As you can see, this indicates size, since there is no mention of seconds.
These are the recommended abbreviations for size, but as I explained. Rather steer clear from them.

Caveats:

The moment you see size expressed along with seconds, for example “GB/s” it means that
someone has started expressing SPEED in BYTES, instead of SPEED in BITS, which is perfectly valid.
This is how your internet explorer expresses it’s transfer speed when downloading that huge file.
You will see things like 30kB/s in your internet explorer download, which indicates a speed expressed
in bytes. Most end user software express their download speed in BYTES because BYTES are typically
the smallest unit that computers deal with when storing things.
Modems on the other hand typically deal with BITS which is why modem speeds are expressed in
BITS per second.
There’s also a further BINARY expression of bits,

References:

For further reference:
  •  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megabyte
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit_rate
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bits_per_second