Bit
A bit (b) is the smallest unit of digital information. It represents a binary value of 0 or 1, the foundation of all data processing in computers and electronic systems. Bits are most commonly used to measure internet speeds, network bandwidth, and data transmission rates.
Because bits are so small, they scale up into larger units like kilobits and megabits for practical use. Converters help users translate network speed ratings into file sizes to understand how long downloads or streaming might take.
Kilobyte
A kilobyte (KB) is a digital storage unit equal to 1,000 bytes. It is one of the smallest data units commonly seen on computers and mobile devices, especially for text files, simple documents, and small application components. The kilobyte helps describe file sizes that are too large for bytes but still quite small in practical use.
Because computers store information in binary, kilobytes and larger units can sometimes differ slightly depending on how a device measures storage. A converter helps match these values correctly when switching between bytes, kilobytes, and megabytes.