Terabit per second to Kibibyte per second

Tbps

1 Tbps

KiBps

122,070,312.5 KiBps

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Quick Reference Table (Terabit per second to Kibibyte per second)

Terabit per second (Tbps)Kibibyte per second (KiBps)
0.112,207,031.25
1122,070,312.5
101,220,703,125
10012,207,031,250
40048,828,125,000
1,000122,070,312,500

About Terabit per second (Tbps)

A terabit per second (Tbps) equals 1,000 Gbps and is the unit of internet backbone and submarine cable capacity. Transoceanic fiber cables carry hundreds of terabits per second in aggregate across multiple wavelengths using dense wavelength-division multiplexing (DWDM). The global internet collectively carries several hundred Tbps at peak. Individual backbone router links at major exchange points operate at 100–400 Gbps, with Tbps links emerging in the largest facilities.

A single modern transoceanic submarine cable can carry 200–400 Tbps of aggregate capacity. Major internet exchange points like DE-CIX in Frankfurt peak at over 10 Tbps.

About Kibibyte per second (KiBps)

A kibibyte per second (KiB/s) equals 1,024 bytes per second — the binary IEC equivalent of kilobyte per second. Operating systems such as Linux, macOS, and Windows 10+ increasingly use KiB/s when reporting file transfer speeds to be precise about the binary calculation. A kibibyte per second is about 2.4% more than a kilobyte per second. The distinction matters in embedded systems, microcontrollers, and protocol specifications where exact byte counts determine buffer allocation.

Linux file transfer tools like rsync report speeds in KiB/s by default. A serial link running at 9,600 baud transfers roughly 1.17 KiB/s (1,200 bytes/s).


Terabit per second – Frequently Asked Questions

Global internet traffic peaks at roughly 1,000–1,500 Tbps (1–1.5 Pbps) as of 2026. This is growing at about 25% per year, driven by video streaming, cloud computing, and AI training data transfers. A single viral live event can spike regional traffic by tens of Tbps.

Internet traffic automatically reroutes through other cables and paths via BGP routing protocols, usually within seconds. Speed may degrade in the affected region but rarely drops entirely. Cable cuts happen more often than people think — about 100 per year globally, mostly from ship anchors and fishing trawlers.

Dense wavelength-division multiplexing (DWDM) sends dozens of different light colors (wavelengths) through a single fiber simultaneously, each carrying its own data stream. A modern cable contains multiple fiber pairs, each carrying 100+ wavelengths, with each wavelength modulated at 400 Gbps or more.

Netflix's library is estimated at around 30–40 petabytes. At 1 Tbps, downloading the entire catalog would take roughly 70–90 hours. At 100 Tbps (a realistic submarine cable capacity), you could theoretically grab all of Netflix in under an hour.

Researchers at Japan's NICT achieved 22.9 Pbps (22,900 Tbps) through a single multicore fiber in 2024. That is enough to transfer the entire Library of Congress in a fraction of a second. These lab records typically reach commercial deployment 5–10 years later.

Kibibyte per second – Frequently Asked Questions

Rsync follows IEC binary conventions because it deals with file sizes that are measured in binary units by the filesystem. Since files occupy whole filesystem blocks (typically 4 KiB), reporting transfer speed in KiB/s makes the math consistent with actual data moved on disk.

1 KiB/s (1,024 bytes/second) is 2.4% faster than 1 kB/s (1,000 bytes/second). The difference is tiny at this scale but matters when you are designing buffer sizes for embedded systems where every byte of RAM counts.

Microsoft started using binary units more consistently in Windows 10 after years of ambiguity where "KB" sometimes meant 1,000 and sometimes 1,024 bytes. The shift toward KiB follows IEC recommendations and reduces confusion, though the transition is still incomplete across all Windows tools.

A 3.5-inch floppy drive transferred data at about 31–62 KiB/s (250–500 kbps). Copying a full 1.44 MB floppy took roughly 25–50 seconds. For comparison, a modern NVMe SSD is about 100,000 times faster.

In embedded systems with tight memory constraints, confusing 1,024 with 1,000 can overflow a buffer. In network protocols, a spec written in KiB/s being implemented as kB/s means transmitting 2.4% less data than expected per second — enough to cause timing violations in real-time systems.

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