Mebibit per second to Kilobyte per second
Mibps
KBps
Conversion History
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Quick Reference Table (Mebibit per second to Kilobyte per second)
| Mebibit per second (Mibps) | Kilobyte per second (KBps) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 131.072 |
| 10 | 1,310.72 |
| 100 | 13,107.2 |
| 953 | 124,911.616 |
| 1,000 | 131,072 |
| 9,537 | 1,250,033.664 |
About Mebibit per second (Mibps)
A mebibit per second (Mibps) equals 1,048,576 bits per second — the binary IEC equivalent of megabit per second. It is approximately 4.9% larger than 1 Mbps. Mibps appears in network performance specifications written to IEC standards, and in operating system tools on Linux and some Unix variants that apply binary prefixes strictly. When a Linux system reports "ethtool: speed 100MiB/s", this distinction from 100 MB/s (decimal) matters in precise bandwidth budgeting.
A 100 Mibps figure represents 104.86 Mbps in decimal — about 5% more data. Network engineers use Mibps when exact binary calculations are required for buffer sizing.
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.
Mebibit per second – Frequently Asked Questions
When would I encounter mebibits instead of megabits?
Mainly in Linux system tools, IEC-compliant technical specifications, and some enterprise storage documentation. The iperf3 network testing tool can report in Mibps if configured to use binary units. Most consumer-facing software and ISPs use megabits exclusively.
How do I convert Mibps to Mbps?
Multiply by 1.048576. So 100 Mibps = 104.86 Mbps. To go from Mbps to Mibps, divide by 1.048576. At small values the difference is negligible, but at gigabit scales it can mean a meaningful amount of data.
Why does Linux sometimes use binary units for networking?
Linux kernel developers historically followed IEC recommendations to use binary prefixes where applicable. Some tools like dd and rsync default to binary (MiB/s) for disk operations. However, network-facing tools like ethtool and ip still use decimal Mbps because that is what the hardware reports.
Does the 5% difference between Mibps and Mbps matter in practice?
For casual use, no. For capacity planning and SLA compliance, yes. If a contract guarantees 100 Mibps and the provider measures in Mbps, the customer might get 100 Mbps (only 95.4 Mibps) and technically be short-changed. Data center SLAs should specify which unit system applies.
Is my ISP cheating me by using megabits instead of mebibits?
No — ISPs legitimately use decimal megabits because Ethernet and fiber standards are decimal. A "100 Mbps" plan genuinely delivers 100,000,000 bits per second. The confusion arises only when comparing with binary-unit tools. ISPs are not hiding anything; the two systems just coexist awkwardly.
Kilobyte per second – Frequently Asked Questions
How long did it take to download a song on dial-up at 7 kB/s?
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.
What is the difference between kB/s and KB/s?
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%.
Why do some apps still show download speeds in kB/s?
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.
How fast was early ADSL compared to dial-up in kB/s?
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.
What speed do text messages transfer at in kB/s?
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.