The units are wrong. A megabyte is a 1000 kilobytes, and a megabit is 1000 kilobits. So 1/1000 of a megabit is a kilobit. As a unit gets larger for the same amount, the decimal point gets moved further to the left.
Now, if you mean the older terminology when everything was based on 1024, that was all given new prefixes. So a mebibyte is 1024 kibibytes, thus a kibibyte is 1/1024 of a mebibyte.
There is only 1 bit in a bit. If you are meaning how many bits are in a byte, there are 8 bits in one byte.
32-bit
for two n bits multiplication results produce 2n bits
one bit, holding a value 1 or 0.
there are eight bits in a bite ,but ,there are sixteen bites in a bit
there are eight bits in a bite ,but ,there are sixteen bites in a bit
8086 is a 16bit processor.
640 Kilobyte is equal to 5243000 bits (1 KB = 8192 bits)
1024 bits
32 bit
There are 8 bits in 1 byte.
1 megabyte is 8388608 bits