Gibibyte per second to Kilobyte per second

GiB/s

1 GiB/s

KBps

1,073,741.824 KBps

Conversion History

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1 GiB/s (Gibibyte per second) → 1073741.824 KBps (Kilobyte per second)

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Quick Reference Table (Gibibyte per second to Kilobyte per second)

Gibibyte per second (GiB/s)Kilobyte per second (KBps)
0.5536,870.912
11,073,741.824
77,516,192.768
1212,884,901.888
5053,687,091.2
100107,374,182.4
1,0081,082,331,758.592

About Gibibyte per second (GiB/s)

A gibibyte per second (GiB/s) equals 1,073,741,824 bytes per second and is used in high-performance storage and memory bandwidth measurements when binary precision is required. GPU memory bandwidth figures in technical documentation sometimes appear in GiB/s — an NVIDIA RTX 4090 features 1,008 GiB/s of GDDR6X memory bandwidth. NVMe SSD sequential read speeds are often reported as both GB/s (decimal) and GiB/s (binary) in reviews and datasheets.

The NVIDIA RTX 4090 GPU has 1,008 GiB/s of memory bandwidth (~1,082 GB/s in decimal). DDR5-6400 dual-channel memory provides about 100 GiB/s.

About Kilobyte per second (KBps)

A kilobyte per second (kB/s or KBps) equals 8,000 bits per second and was the standard unit for measuring file download speeds in the dial-up and early broadband era. Download managers throughout the 1990s and 2000s displayed speeds in kB/s — a 56 kbps modem delivered about 7 kB/s, while early ADSL connections reached 256–512 kB/s. The unit remains useful for describing very slow links such as SMS data, GPRS connections, and low-speed serial interfaces.

A 56 kbps dial-up modem transferred files at roughly 7 kB/s. GPRS mobile data (2G) typically achieved 20–40 kB/s.


Gibibyte per second – Frequently Asked Questions

GPU memory is addressed in binary (power-of-2 bus widths like 256-bit or 384-bit), so binary units naturally describe the actual hardware capability. Some vendors use GiB/s to be precise, while marketing materials prefer the larger-sounding GB/s number. The RTX 4090's 1,008 GiB/s is 1,082 GB/s — the latter sounds faster.

DDR5-6000 in dual-channel mode provides about 93 GiB/s (100 GB/s). Quad-channel DDR5 on workstation platforms doubles this to ~186 GiB/s. The actual usable bandwidth depends on memory access patterns — random access achieves far less than sequential streaming.

Memory bandwidth (50–100+ GiB/s for DDR5) measures how fast the CPU can read/write RAM. Storage bandwidth (3–14 GiB/s for NVMe SSDs) measures persistent data transfer. Memory is 10–30× faster because DRAM has nanosecond latency while NAND flash has microsecond latency. They serve different roles in the data hierarchy.

Yes. For memory bandwidth, run a STREAM benchmark (available for Linux and Windows). For storage, use fio or CrystalDiskMark. GPU memory bandwidth can be tested with gpu-burn or vendor-provided tools. All will report in either GiB/s or GB/s depending on the tool — check which one.

Electrical signalling on copper traces maxes out around 112 Gbps (about 13 GiB/s) per lane with current technology. Beyond that, optics take over — silicon photonics interconnects can push individual channels to 200+ Gbps. The physical speed of light in fiber is not the limit; it is the modulation and detection electronics.

Kilobyte per second – Frequently Asked Questions

A typical 4 MB MP3 file at 7 kB/s took about 9–10 minutes to download. Napster users in 1999 would queue up songs before bed and hope the phone line stayed connected overnight. A single disconnection meant starting over from scratch.

Lowercase "k" with uppercase "B" (kB/s) means 1,000 bytes per second (SI decimal). Uppercase "K" with uppercase "B" (KB/s) traditionally meant 1,024 bytes per second (binary). In practice, most software uses them interchangeably, and the difference is only 2.4%.

Apps display kB/s when transfer speeds are genuinely that slow — downloading over congested mobile networks, tethering in rural areas, or transferring tiny files where the connection never ramps up. It is also common in SSH/SCP transfers that display instantaneous speed during small file copies.

The first consumer ADSL plans offered 256 kbps downstream, delivering about 32 kB/s — roughly 4.5× faster than a 56k modem. A 512 kbps plan gave 64 kB/s. That first jump from 7 to 32 kB/s felt revolutionary, cutting a 10-minute download to about 2 minutes.

An SMS is limited to 140 bytes (160 characters in GSM-7 encoding), and the signalling channel transmits it almost instantly. But if you think of SMS throughput over a sustained period, the practical rate is about 0.1–0.5 kB/s because of the overhead between messages.

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