Byte to Exbibyte

B

1 B

EiB

0.00000000000000000087 EiB

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Quick Reference Table (Byte to Exbibyte)

Byte (B)Exbibyte (EiB)
10.00000000000000000087
40.00000000000000000347
80.00000000000000000694
320.00000000000000002776
640.00000000000000005551
1280.00000000000000011102
2560.00000000000000022204

About Byte (B)

A byte (B) is a unit of digital information equal to 8 bits and is the fundamental unit of memory addressing in virtually all modern computer architectures. Characters, integers, pixels, and audio samples are all expressed in bytes or multiples thereof. The byte is the minimum addressable storage unit in most CPUs — even a single boolean value occupies a full byte of RAM. All file sizes, RAM capacities, and storage device capacities are expressed in bytes or their multiples (kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes). The byte is to data storage what the meter is to distance — the practical base unit from which all others scale.

One byte stores a single ASCII text character (the letter "A" = byte value 65). A typical English word averages 5 bytes including the space. A 1,000-word article takes about 5 kilobytes.

Etymology: The term "byte" was coined by Werner Buchholz in 1956 at IBM during the design of the Stretch supercomputer. The deliberate misspelling (from "bite") was intended to prevent accidental abbreviation to "b", which was reserved for "bit".

About Exbibyte (EiB)

An exbibyte (EiB) equals exactly 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes (2⁶⁰ bytes) in the IEC binary system. It is 15.29% larger than the decimal exabyte (10¹⁸ bytes). The exbibyte represents the upper limit of currently deployed storage infrastructure for single organisations — the largest hyperscale cloud providers collectively store estimated hundreds of exabytes, and individual installations may approach low-exbibyte scale. The 15.3% gap at this scale means that SI vs IEC ambiguity represents over 150 PB of absolute difference per exbibyte — the highest stakes level of the unit ambiguity problem.

Amazon Web Services is estimated to store multiple exabytes of customer data — on the order of a few EiB across all regions. Google's total storage infrastructure is estimated at 10–20 EiB.


Byte – Frequently Asked Questions

A byte contains exactly 8 bits. This is the universal modern standard, though early computing used variable byte sizes (5, 6, or 7 bits). The 8-bit byte became universal with the IBM System/360 in 1964. Eight bits allow 256 possible values (0–255), sufficient to encode all ASCII characters with room for control codes.

Eight bits became standard because it is the smallest power of two that can encode all 128 ASCII characters (7 bits) with a spare bit for parity checking or extended character sets. It also maps cleanly to two hexadecimal digits (0x00–0xFF), making it convenient for low-level programming and hardware design. Earlier systems used 6-bit or 7-bit bytes; 8-bit won due to IBM's dominance in the 1960s–70s.

A nibble (also spelled nybble) is 4 bits — half a byte. A nibble represents exactly one hexadecimal digit (0–F). The term is used in low-level programming, embedded systems, and BCD (binary-coded decimal) encoding. It is not an SI unit and rarely appears in general computing contexts outside of hardware and systems programming.

It depends on the character and encoding. In UTF-8 (the dominant web encoding): ASCII characters (A–Z, 0–9) use 1 byte; common European accented characters use 2 bytes; most Asian scripts (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) use 3 bytes; emoji and rare characters use 4 bytes. A plain English text file is efficiently encoded as 1 byte per character in UTF-8.

In most modern usage, byte and octet are synonymous — both mean 8 bits. "Octet" is preferred in networking standards (RFC documents, ITU specifications) to avoid ambiguity from early computing where byte sizes varied. Internet protocol headers are specified in octets; operating systems and storage devices use bytes. In practice you will encounter "octet" mainly in formal networking documentation.

Exbibyte – Frequently Asked Questions

EB (exabyte) = 10¹⁸ bytes (SI decimal). EiB (exbibyte) = 2⁶⁰ bytes = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes (IEC binary). EiB is 15.29% larger. This is the largest practically significant SI vs IEC discrepancy: per exbibyte, the binary value exceeds the decimal value by approximately 152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes — about 152.9 petabytes.

One exbibyte (EiB) ≈ 1.153 × 10¹⁸ bytes = 1,073,741,824 GiB = 1,048,576 TiB. In practical terms: enough to store approximately 230 billion JPEG photos at 5 MB each, or 288,230,376 copies of a 4 GB HD movie, or the entire text content of the English internet many thousands of times over.

In theory, yes — and with astonishing density. DNA can encode about 215 PiB per gram of material, meaning a single EiB could fit in roughly 4.7 grams of synthetic DNA. Researchers at Microsoft and the University of Washington have demonstrated writing and reading megabytes of data in DNA strands. The challenges are speed and cost: current DNA synthesis writes about 400 bytes per second and costs around $3,500 per megabyte. At that rate, writing 1 EiB would take billions of years and cost more than global GDP. However, enzymatic synthesis breakthroughs could reduce costs by 6–8 orders of magnitude within decades.

Storing 1 EiB on modern HDDs would require roughly 57,000 drives of 20 TB each, consuming about 400–500 kW of power just for the drives — plus 200–300 kW for cooling, networking, and overhead. That totals roughly 6 GWh per year, equivalent to powering about 550 US homes. At typical US grid carbon intensity, this produces around 2,500 tonnes of CO₂ annually. Hyperscale operators reduce this via renewable energy and immersion cooling, but the fundamental physics of spinning magnetic platters or maintaining NAND charge states sets a floor on energy consumption that no software optimisation can eliminate.

After exbibyte (EiB, 2⁶⁰ bytes) come: zebibyte (ZiB, 2⁷⁰ bytes) and yobibyte (YiB, 2⁸⁰ bytes), as defined in IEC 80000-13. These are recognized standard units but have no current practical applications. The entire global internet's estimated stored data (hundreds of EB) is still in the low hundreds of EiB range — well short of one ZiB.

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