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1024 bits
Binary digit = 1 bit. Four bits = 1 nibble. 8 bits = 1 byte.[An obsolete computer type used 9 bits to a byte, but that is history, not modern practice. ]
You will need many discrete bits. The number goes up because of the high number of amplitude levels.
eight bits are in a dollar
28-bits
2 MB per second equals 16,777,215.9 bits per second.
In order to know how many bits/second there are in 1 frame/second, you need to know how many bits are in that frame. In a typical asychronous serial protocol with 8 bits per frame, the bit rate would be 0.125 bits/second. If you are talking the IP network layer of TCP/IP, then the frame size is very dependent on the underlying message payload and headers.The original question, by the way, is invalid. Its asks "how many bits does...", but it should have asked "how manys bits per second does...".
On a modern 100Mb (million bits/second) broadband connection a megabyte transfers in 80 milliseconds (1.333E-3 minutes).
The human brain on average takes in 11 million bits of information per second. However the brain is only aware of just 40 of those bits of information per second.
Baud Width is an outdated Internet term. It refers to how many bits in a baud a modem can send per second. A baud is actually a pulse and carries a certain amount of bits per pulse. Nowadays its much simpler to refer to bits per second (BPS) since this is what Internet users wish to know; verses how many bits in a baud [pulse], and how many of these bauds are put out in a second.
100 megabits per second (Mbps) = 12800 kilobytes per second (KBps)
6 mega bits per second (equavalent of 6 million bits per second). If this is the speed of your internet, it is raesonable, but far from the fastest. Many countries now will offer connections at 1000 Mbps.
Most modern digital cameras use 24 bits (8 bits per primary) to represent a color. But more or less can be used, depending on the quality desired. Many early computer graphics cards used only 4 bits to represent a color.
They will require 24 bits per second to 30 frames each second.
141750
5,627
Baud is the number of symbols per second. So if you have a parallel interface where the 8 bits are sent together, I guess 300 bytes per second equates to about 300 baud. With a serial interface, where each of the 8 bits is sent one after the other, extra start/stop bits are usually inserted between the 8 data bits, I guess 300 bytes per second equates to about 3000 baud. Baud is the number of changes per second. Since computers use binary number to store information, the baud rate is directly equivalent to the number of bits sent per second. Specifically, in an ASCII character set 8 bits are used to represent a character, 300 bits per second would equate to 37.5 characters per second which in turn is 2250 characters per minute. (just under 2 kilobytes per minute assuming no error correction overheads).