Bit per second to Gibibit per second
bps
Gibps
Conversion History
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Quick Reference Table (Bit per second to Gibibit per second)
| Bit per second (bps) | Gibibit per second (Gibps) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.00000000093132257462 |
| 10 | 0.00000000931322574615 |
| 100 | 0.00000009313225746155 |
| 1,000 | 0.00000093132257461548 |
| 9,600 | 0.00000894069671630859 |
| 56,000 | 0.0000521540641784668 |
About Bit per second (bps)
A bit per second (bps) is the base unit of data transfer rate, representing one binary digit transmitted every second. It is the foundation from which all larger bandwidth units are built. In practice, raw bps figures are useful only for extremely low-speed links — early telegraph systems, narrowband IoT sensors, and some serial control lines operate at tens to thousands of bps. Modern connections are described in kbps, Mbps, or Gbps, making raw bps a reference unit rather than a practical measurement for everyday networking.
Early Morse code telegraph lines transmitted at roughly 10–50 bps. Modern IoT sensors on LoRaWAN networks communicate at 250–50,000 bps.
About Gibibit per second (Gibps)
A gibibit per second (Gibps) equals 1,073,741,824 bits per second — the binary IEC equivalent of gigabit per second, roughly 7.4% larger than 1 Gbps. Gibps is used in high-performance computing and storage specifications where the distinction between powers of 1,000 and 1,024 affects system design. InfiniBand and PCIe bandwidth specifications sometimes appear in gibibit per second in technical documentation.
A 10 Gibps InfiniBand port carries 10.74 Gbps in decimal terms. PCIe Gen 3 ×1 lane has a bandwidth of roughly 1 Gibps in binary terms.
Bit per second – Frequently Asked Questions
Why is a bit the smallest unit of data transfer?
A bit represents a single binary choice — 0 or 1 — which is the fundamental quantum of digital information. Every larger unit (byte, kilobit, megabit) is just a multiple of bits. You cannot meaningfully subdivide a binary digit, so bps is the floor of data rate measurement.
What modern devices still operate at bits per second?
LoRaWAN IoT sensors, some RFID readers, and legacy serial ports (RS-232 at 300–9600 baud) still deal in raw bps ranges. Satellites communicating with deep-space probes also use very low bps — NASA's Voyager 1 transmits at about 160 bps from interstellar space.
Is baud the same as bits per second?
Not exactly. Baud measures symbol changes per second, while bps measures bits per second. If each symbol encodes one bit, they are equal. But modern modems encode multiple bits per symbol — a 2400-baud modem using 16-QAM transmits 9600 bps because each symbol carries 4 bits.
How many bits per second does a human speaking convey?
Research suggests human speech carries about 39 bits per second of actual information content, regardless of language. Italian speakers talk faster but convey less information per syllable than Japanese speakers, balancing out to roughly the same bps across all studied languages.
Why did early modems top out at 56,000 bps?
The 56 kbps limit came from the Shannon-Hartley theorem applied to analogue phone lines. The 3.1 kHz bandwidth of a voice telephone channel, combined with its signal-to-noise ratio, creates a theoretical ceiling near 56 kbps. FCC power regulations further capped actual downstream to 53.3 kbps.
Gibibit per second – Frequently Asked Questions
Why does the 7.4% difference matter at gibibit scale?
At gibibit speeds, 7.4% represents a substantial amount of data. The difference between 10 Gibps and 10 Gbps is 737 Mbps — enough bandwidth for several 4K video streams. When designing storage fabrics or HPC interconnects, misinterpreting the unit can lead to underprovisioned systems.
Does PCIe bandwidth use binary or decimal units?
PCIe specifications are actually defined in GT/s (gigatransfers per second) with specific encoding overhead. PCIe 3.0 uses 128b/130b encoding at 8 GT/s, giving about 985 MB/s per lane — which is closer to binary GiB/s than decimal GB/s. The industry uses both units somewhat loosely.
How does InfiniBand express bandwidth — Gibps or Gbps?
InfiniBand specifications use decimal rates (HDR = 200 Gbps, NDR = 400 Gbps per port). However, some HPC benchmarks and documentation convert to binary units for consistency with memory bandwidth figures. Always check the document's unit convention to avoid the 7% discrepancy.
What is the practical impact of confusing Gibps and Gbps in a data center?
Ordering a 100 Gibps fabric when you needed 100 Gbps means overpaying for 7.4% more bandwidth than necessary. Conversely, provisioning 100 Gbps when your workload needs 100 Gibps leaves you 7.4% short, potentially causing congestion during peak loads. At data center scale, these margins translate to real money.
Will the industry ever standardize on one system?
Unlikely. Networking is firmly decimal (Ethernet, fiber optics), while memory and storage have binary roots. The two worlds overlap in storage networking, causing permanent confusion. The best practice is to always explicitly state "decimal" or "binary" in specifications rather than hoping everyone agrees.