The little ' m ' stands for 'mega' which is the same as 'million'.So 3.1 mbps = 3,100,000 bps.
4%
A decimal number is simply a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of a one is ten times that of a one in the place to its right. If it does not contain a fractional part then the decimal representation does not require a decimal point. So the decimal for 50 bps is 50 bps – as in the question.
There are 100bps in 1 percentage point. So its 100bps in 1 percent and 100 percent in one whole unit. Bps are used in situations where v small changes are being made - i.e. particularly in interest rates. So when the FED says its changing interest rates by 25bps it means 0.25% or like a change from 3% to 3.25%.
Polyrhythms will loop back at the LCM of each of the individual rhythms. So if you have two polyrhythms: one with m beats per second (Bps)and the other with n bps, then they will repeat their pattern every p seconds where p is the LCM of m and n. If they are synchronised at any point in time, then their synchronicity will repeat every p seconds.
It depends on what you major in. If you major in Psychology, then you can get an entry level job related to that field. You could also get an entry level job in a number of other fields that require a general liberal arts four-year degree. Many jobs just ask for a Bachelors Degree and don't specify. See below for expected pay scale: http://www.payscale.com/research/US/Degree=Bachelor_of_Professional_Studies_(BPS)/Salary
From what I understand, a BS similar to a BPS, only that the liberal arts course load is smaller with a BPS. Also, a BPS focuses more on your major and is more concentrated in whatever you're studying. It's less known so some people might not know if its better or worse than a BS. Either way, it's the B that people care about more, not what follows.
Browning Pump Shotgun "BPS"
There is no BPS file for the Xbox.
62 bps
With lowercase 'b' (bps), "bits per second" With uppercase 'B' (Bps), "bytes per second"
Sps 3 pay scale is equal to Bps 7
Legally, NPPL allowed for 15 bps. The fastest BPS ever recorded was 50 BPS on an Autococker.
14000 thousand for bps 9 and 22000 for bps 16
32 year old BPS in 12 gauge.
Among other BPS shotguns, yes.
Besides our buiding with red marking corporation official written BPS? what does it mean.